my personal Blog page
Welcome to Life in Idle, my personal blog page. Whether you're a long time reader (both of you), or a new friend, welcome!

Feel free to poke around. I also have a hub site located at JClarkOnline.com that collects more of my creative works, so head on over and check it out!


1st Photo Composite: Zombies!

I haven't mentioned it on this page yet, but I've recently gone back to school. I've had an Associate's Degree for almost eight years now, and in that time I've learned two things: I need a Bachelor's Degree to get where I want to be, and I don't like the field I'm in. Don't get me wrong, drafting is fine (and I'm good at it), but the career path ahead of me has me becoming an engineer, or a project manager, and I simply don't want either of those for myself.

So I decided to go back to school, but not just any school, I wanted to go to art school. When I graduated from High School I had a choice, art or drafting. I went with the safe choice then, and I don't think it was the right choice. Oh well, lesson learned, so this time I'm doing what I want to do. I'm two weeks into my first quarter at the Art Institute of Atlanta in the Media and Animation program, and I'm loving it. I went with animation because it neatly combines my interest in art, with my love of computers, and my desire to be a story teller. Who knows if I'll become an animator, but it seems like a good place to start. After all, several people I admire greatly started out as animators (Tim Burton, Terry Gilliam, and Brad Bird come to mind).

My classes for this quarter are English II (I placed out of English I due to my prior degree), and Digital Photographic Production, which is basically an intermediate Photoshop class (also because of my previous education, I took a Photoshop class to finish off my degree). I just completed my first photographic composite, and I'm thrilled with the results:

ZOMBIES

That's actually five photos combined into one. One of the background (a Catholic cemetery in South Portland, Maine), one of Eric (on the left, from his wedding reception actually), and one of myself that I took just for this. Photos four and five are close-ups of my teeth, which allowed me to create the torn cheek. My favorite part, by far, is Eric's shirt. It's amazing what you can do with the burn tool.

I'm going to be re-doing my hub site (www.jclarkonline.com) as a gallery or my work as I progress through school. I might be making some big changes here as well, but we'll see.

Now I can't wait until Thursday to see what everyone thinks of this, and to see if anyone manages to upstage me this time (like they did for our first in class exercise, darn it).
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