- Computer/laptop
- Printer (if you want to move images around physically)
- Scissors
- Tape/blue-tack
1
Neighbourhood Watch: Lesson 1
1
Neighbourhood Watch: Lesson 1
2
Neighbourhood Watch: Lesson 2
3
Neighbourhood Watch: Lesson 3
4
Neighbourhood Watch: Lesson 4
5
Neighbourhood Watch: Lesson 5
6
Video Editing with Paper: Lesson 1
7
Video Editing with Paper: Lesson 2
8
People Garland: Lesson 1
9
People Garland: Lesson 2
10
People Garland: Lesson 3
It's time to review the next lot of photos you took. Think of these as your ‘finals’. Next you will begin sequencing and grouping your images and start putting together your zine!
Equipment
Instructions
Upload your photos onto your laptop/computer (remember to save into a nicely labeled folder because file management is important, ok)
Now organise your images into thumbnails (images all the same size) and place them into a document
Print your images and cut them out
Stick your images onto the wall, sequencing them in a way that works for your concept. Try a few different layouts and photograph them as you go to keep track
If you have text or other imagery you want to include in your zine, now is the time to incorporate this into your layout and sequencing
Lesson Content
The output for this project will be a photo book inspired zine.
When making zines or photobooks, the sequencing of images is really important. It can have the ability to tell a story and change the way your photographs are read/viewed.
Now you have taken more photos, it's time to print them out again (like in lesson 2). Print out the images you consider your ‘finals’, this may include images from lesson 1. This time you need to think about image sequencing/order, grouping, and story. This will relate to your concept or idea/intention behind your project.
Considerations
Things to think about when sequencing photographs:
Picking photographs that work well together/next to each other.
Layouts for your images may work.
Photos you want big and photos you want small.
Do you want all your images to have a cohesive hue and saturation or do you want them all very different?