David Clark

David Clark

סופר


1.
Designed for a novice, this fully illustrated instruction book will guide you through the process of creating your very own digital family scrapebook-complete with a CD containing ready-to-use templates. This graphically rich guide will show you how to convert your cache of old family photographs, mementos, and documents to modern digital formats so you can permanently archive them to reliable storage media. Learn how to digitally archive memorabilia using simple software tools and templates provided on a PC- and Mac-compatible CD, along with a scanner or a digital camera, to create your own personalized family archive.

Even a novice will be able to:
* Access the ready-to-use templates along with the software application
* Use the archive interface-just add the text and images and select a template style
* Watch Take the Tour, which provides an overview of all the features so that when you start your own project you'll have a feel of what needs to be done to personalize and organize your memorabilia
* Print your memories, create a slide show, or just store on a CD
* Update your archive whenever you want, and print out an index or image thumbnails to keep track of what you have already stored

Share your heritage with your entire family!
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2.

The question 'What is photography?' is not an easy one to answer. Many thousands of words have been written in an effort to do so, in academic journals and in books by cultural commentators such as Susan Sontag and Roland Barthes. If we acknowledge that it is impossible to provide a definitive answer, can we at least distil the meaning of photography into somewhat fewer words, and get to the very essence of the medium without diminishing its importance as an art form?



This book aims to do just that. David Clark has selected 50 iconic images by some of the world's greatest photographers and asked them to explain how the pictures were made and their creative approach. From these interviews he has chosen 100 words - two from each photographer - that encapsulate their philosophy, and which are picked out in bold in the text. Martin Parr, for example, likes to capture ambiguity in many of his images, whereas David Bailey hopes for the perfect accident. For Harry Benson a news picture must have a sense of crisis while reportage photographer Paolo Pellegrin sees his role as that of a witness. And while Harry Cory Wright strives for completeness in his landscapes, Michael Kenna is drawn to the idea of suggestion.



The highlighted words work on two levels. As well as giving insights into iconic images from the photographers who took them, they build over the course of the book into a unique creative lexicon of the photographic medium - one which crystallises its many aims and functions, perspectives and meanings. Thought-provoking, insightful and inspirational, Photography in 100 Words will appeal to all photographers and anyone who seeks a better understanding of the medium.



* Features a host of famous names, including Ralph Gibson, Art Wolfe, Elliott Erwitt, David Bailey, Martin Parr, Frans Lanting, Nick Danzinger, Dennis Stock and Yann-Arthus Bertrand




* World renowned photographers discuss their philosophy and approach, and explain their iconic images





* Includes photographers from all branches of the medium, from landscape to still-life, portraiture to reportage



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