For the David Hockney collage I photographed a river. It was late afternoon when I took my pictures and the sun had just began to go down. I stood on the middle of a bridge and took about 20 photos starting from the left rotating around to the right. Every image I took was different so it is easy to see the passage of time in them. You can tell by the movement of the water and the different colors in the sky.
I made a new document in photoshop with the width of 24 and height of 18. Out of all he pictures I took I used 8 of the in my edit. I put all the images into the document and resized them all. I overlaid the smaller pictures on top of the larger ones and matched them up with the pictures beneath them. When matching them I didn't do it perfectly. Instead I purposely put them so the landscape wasn't exactly the same.
My photomontage is a more interesting piece of art than a straightforward photo because there is more movement than a straightforward picture would have. The uneven parts of the pictures and the color differences where they overlap creates more of a visual appeal.
I made a new document in photoshop with the width of 24 and height of 18. Out of all he pictures I took I used 8 of the in my edit. I put all the images into the document and resized them all. I overlaid the smaller pictures on top of the larger ones and matched them up with the pictures beneath them. When matching them I didn't do it perfectly. Instead I purposely put them so the landscape wasn't exactly the same.
My photomontage is a more interesting piece of art than a straightforward photo because there is more movement than a straightforward picture would have. The uneven parts of the pictures and the color differences where they overlap creates more of a visual appeal.