
Unemployment is Not an Option




I’ve been a student for the past 17 years of my life. It’s something that I’ve just become used to because I attended school for so long. There have been many ups and downs along the way. However, attending Florida State University impacted me the most. I’ve grown so much in the past five years in ways that I could never imagine. I am so thankful and blessed for my opportunity to attend this wonderful University. I decided to talk about the university because I love it so much.
One of my favorite memories at Florida State University was becoming a University Ambassador (also known as a tour guide) and being able to share my love and experiences with other prospective students and families. This position on campus was unlike any other. My coworkers were not just my coworkers but became a new family away from home.

I decided to edit a picture of the famous Wescott fountain because it is the last part where we end the tour of our beautiful campus. These experiences I had with random strangers on tour impacted me more than I would have thought. Each tour allowed me to reflect on my time spent at Florida State University due to the questions being asked on tour.

I wanted to focus on the fountain because it is a key tradition on campus as well as the tour. many may not know this but on your very last time giving a tour you get to be thrown in the fountain as a way to conclude your time being an ambassador. I think this is one of the coolest traditions ever. Unfortunately, I never got the chance to be thrown in due to COVID but hopefully one day I get the chance. Either way, I will always be proud to be a Nole.
It took me a while to decide on a single picture but I settled on this one of my sister’s kitten for a few reasons:


Although the original image captures how small Pusheen once was, and instantly elevates the cute factor, it does not bring focus to those big eyes. I tried to follow the rule of three discussed in class by avoiding placing Pusheen in the absolute center. The effect changes Pusheen’s gaze. In the original image, it seems as though Pusheen may be staring off into space. The second image tightens up the focus and gives the impression that Pusheen is looking at the viewer instead and gives her an almost thoughtful gaze.
Don’t let her gaze decieve you. She is a criminal and she knows it.
One evening last semester, we were working on a group project and started sharing where we live. “I love Naples!” My teammate said to me, “You have beautiful beaches.”
We better, I thought. My very affluent community spends a lot of money on them.
Being the gracious lady that I am, I held my tongue and said, “Thank you.” Literally that same week, I ended up having to stay home from work to deal with car issues. While it was being repaired, I decided to walk to the beach and remind myself that I had a lot of things to be grateful for.
I got to the beach and remembered that my county is in the middle of a beach regeneration project. My first thought was to take a picture to share with my classmate. So I found a somewhat safe spot and tried to take some pictures. However, it was bright and hard to see the screen of my phone. When I got home, the pictures looked bad, so I decided not to share them. Here is an example of one of the pictures:

It is a boring picture. Not only is my knee in the way, but the surreal experience of an oversized Tonka truck driving up and down the beach with a minion is lost.
This week, I decided to edit this picture using the Rule of Thirds. It was hard to pick between the two subjects, and how to position the image vertically. I finally came up with this:

I think this version not only better represents the enormity of the trucks that were rolling down the beach that day, but it gives me an opportunity to tell a much better story.
This was the day the Decepticons came for me.

I was looking for an image that I felt conveyed everyday life. I started looking for “hide and seek” themed pictures and stumbled across this one. I couldn’t really figure out why this was called hide and seek, outside of the fact that the person’s face was hidden by their hood, but I like the phone being the focal point of her place in the photo. At face value, I see a person who is selling food at a local market, with shipping supplies or storage boxes for her wares. Now with some tweaking…

Voila! The image tells a different story. I called it “Distraction” because this perspective changes the story the image may convey to the viewer. For example, I now see someone surrounded by squalor but seeks respite from their situation via their phone, or their “distraction”. You could also see something less depressing, like someone cleaning out a storage unit and taking a break while their lunch cools off. Either way, cropping can be a powerful tool!
Before

After

For me, selecting an image to crop was the hardest. I am a photographer by trade and when I take my photos, I take into account major cropping or rule of thirds into my photography in the camera. I wanted to use my own images, but most of them had already been cropped the way I like them to be, so I grabbed one of my photos from the trash. This was taken in Bar Harbor, Maine last summer. We were as this little cove, parked on the side of the road, literally. I wanted to get out and walk between the rocks when these two gulls decided to join us.
I cropped the bridge and the other bird out to change the story a little bit. Even though gulls can be social animals, I wanted to show off the markings on this particular gull. The bridge was distracting an didn’t make the place seem as magical as it could be.

This is my happy place when looking at this picture before cropping the photo. You see everything and there is no focus. You have the sky, the hills, the eagle’s nest, the pond, the house, and the ATV. There is a lot of different things to focus and you can get distracted by many different things going on in the picture.

Now with the photo cropped its focus is on the house where I used to sleep after a long day of being out in the middle of nowhere. The ATV took me to all the new and different places. With the photo is cropped you can just focus on two different things the house and the ATV. Having cropped the picture shows a different story. Having the photo cropped I like that the house is more in focus. I learned a lot and did a lot in that house.


I tend to gravitate towards a black and white color palette. Black and white images, black and white clothing. I think there is something very emotive and chic about focusing on shadows and relying on the composition. This is why designers tend to design logos in black and white first because you can focus on composition and not get distracted with color.
The original image is actually really nice. The composition creates an interested split between the bright, open section and the darkness of the cluster of people. It creates a strong sense of airy (sky/street) vs dense (people).
In my crop I wanted to focus in on the faces I actually found to be the most interesting, because when you close in on the man’s face, his facial features and expression are somewhat puzzling. is he angry? Confused? Annoyed by the kid? Then we get to the kid! That side eye is everything. Who’s he looking at?
There is a real narrative that comes forward when this image is cropped like this and you also get a much more constricted view of the man/child. His back is literally up against a wall and in both but his face and the space in front of him is much more limited.
Entire stories can come from one image even when we aren’t 100% sure what we’re seeing.