Digital Photography
Putting songs and video together in a pod cast can be a very powerful way to get a message across.
First we are going to learn a little bit about digital photography
1. Open up MS Word
2. From the menu choose INSERT--> picture-->from-->file
3. Locate the picture you want
4. Now you can use the picture tool bar to add effects- we will practice this in class
5. Our next step is to insert a chart into MS Word.
6. You can get the chart from tool bar.
7. After we have enlarged the chart we will be using the same picture in 6 boxes using a different
effect on each picture. Isn't it amazing to see how different the same picture can look using special effects?
Where to locate free pictures!
YOU MAY ONLY Use the following sites to gather photo's
http://www.pics4learning.com/
http://www.kidsclick.org/psearch.html
Do not use google images or tag galaxy for in school searches. You may only use Google Image Search when I have presearched the allowed Keyword. Then sand only then may you searxh using only the keywords I provide!
***You may no longer use tag galaxy nor Google images- Apparently there have been some inappripriate pictures discovered at home-so we will be blocking the sites.***
Second we will use Ms Photo editor to crop, resize and change
our pictures.
Click on the powerpoint below to go through the steps to edit a picture
You will need to have powerpoint or open office presenter installed on your home computer!
editingimageslong.ppt
Below are some written step by step directions as well:)
Use Microsoft Photo Editor
source taken from: http://ict.cas.psu.edu/Training/HowTo/MSPhotoEditor/UseMSPhotoEditor.htm#topic1
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Microsoft Photo Editor can be used to rotate, crop, resize, lighten, change resolution, change file format of images and more.
Rotate an Image
- Open Microsoft Photo Editor
- From the File menu (or open icon), choose Open. Navigate to where you have your photos or images stored. Click on the one you want to open.
- Click on the Rotate tool in the Toolbar
- Click the Rotate tool until your image rotates to desired direction.
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Crop an Image
- Open Microsoft Photo Editor
- From the File menu (or open icon), choose Open. Navigate to where you have your photos or images stored. Click on the one you want to open.
- Select the SELECT tool from the Toolbar
- Click and drag to draw a selection rectange around the image you want to keep.
- From the Image menu, choose CROP
- Select either rectangle or oval
- You can also select whether to round corners
- When you have made the selections you need, click OK.
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Resize an Image - you can resize an image BUT REMEMBER, if you have a small image and you want to resize larger, the image may become pixelated or distorted because the resolution is too low to allow for resize. It's much better to have a large image that you resize smaller than to try to make a small image larger.
- Open Microsoft Photo Editor
- From the File menu (or open icon), choose Open. Navigate to where you have your photos or images stored. Click on the one you want to open.
- From the Image menu, choose Resize
- You can enter width & height numbers or you can use percentages to resize. You can also select which unit of measurement to use - inches, centimeters or pixels.
- Do NOT check Allow distortion unless that is what you want. If you leave it blank, you can type in a number in the width and have it auto calculate what the height should be without distoring the image.
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Change the Resolution of an Image - Resolution is the number of pixels in an image. A higher number correlated to a higher quality of image. Sometimes you want to decrease the resolution of an image to lower the file size. REMEMBER, you can decrease the number of pixels in an image but you can't always increase pixels without distortion or pixelation.
- Open Microsoft Photo Editor
- From the File menu (or open icon), choose Open. Navigate to where you have your photos or images stored. Click on the one you want to open.
- From the File menu, choose Properties
- Resolution will be listed. If it says 300, you can drop that to 150 and still print the photo. If you drop the resolution to 72, this photo can be used to display on monitor or projector in PowerPoint or on the web. The photo will not print very sharp at this resolution.
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Change the File Format of an Image - There are different file formats for an image, i.e., JPEG, GIF, TIFF, BMP, and many more. JPEG is the one most used for photographs, GIF is the one most used for line art or clipart. You will want to use TIFF if you want to have a transparent background.
- Open Microsoft Photo Editor
- From the File menu (or open icon), choose Open. Navigate to where you have your photos or images stored. Click on the one you want to open.
- From the File menu, choose SaveAs.
- In the SaveAs dialog box, you can change the file format in the Save as Type box.
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Set Transparent Color or Background - You will want to save your image as TIFF if you want to have a transparent background.
- Open Microsoft Photo Editor
- From the File menu (or open icon), choose Open. Navigate to where you have your photos or images stored. Click on the one you want to open.
- Select the Set Transparent Color icon in Toolbar
- Your mouse pointer should now look like the Tool icon
- Click on the color you want to select to have a transparent background (example: white around a picture or image).
- Your Change Color to Transparent dialog box opens.
- Set the color similarity to far left if you only want the color you selected to be changed.
- Click OK
- Where your image had white around the edges, it will now look like a checkerboard. That means it has a transparent background. You can now insert this in a PowerPoint presentation that has a color design and you won't see the white edges around your photo.
- Click SaveAs
- Change the Save as type box to: Tag Image File Format (*.tif).
- If you click the Save command, you may receive a message that says "This format does not suport transparency. Click Yes or No. You want to click NO
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These links will take you through step by step!
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Start Photo Editor
source taken from: http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Delphi/6470/photoed.htm?200712#Embed
Microsoft Photo Editor.doc
You can download the document above if you want to keep a copy or use it at home.
Third Assignment- You know that thing I have to Grade
After all that work to fix up our pictures we are now going to gather 20-40 pictures around a central theme such as: hope, freedom, faith, tolerance, friendship, loyality, respect ect.
Plan
Draft a StoryBoard that plans the story/narrative
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Ideas??? Web Tutorial (really do look at this!) |
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Launch Word, (Insert Picture, from File)
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Format Pic by right clicking, layout, behind text |
Select one or more quotes around your theme. |
1. We will be importing the pictures into the program Photostory. This program is installed on our work stations at school. If you want a copy for home go to http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/using/digitalphotography/photostory/default.mspx
it is a free download from the microsoft site.
Ideas??? Launch Microsoft PhotoStory from you desktop You can find it in the program folder or you can locate it from the start menu.
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Create! by following the steps from the Web Tutorial
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perhaps open the tutorial window side-by-side with PhotoStory |
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2. Next we will select music that goes with our theme and record it along with the pictures. You will be aloud to do a voice over introductionusing the microphone.
3. When your project is finished we will save as WMP files and turn into podcasts!
Ready....Set......Think>>>>>
Here is a copy of the rubric I will be grading you on
Digital Storytelling grading rubric.doc
FREE Microsoft Download of Photo Story
Click here to go back to the Interactive Lesson Page
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