Archive | Photo Journaling

ASM Apprentice Call for Summer entries

MINOLTA DIGITAL CAMERAIf you’re are an active member and completed the After School Matters Photo Journaling program for Spring 2010, you can participate in our call for entries Summer 2010.

You only have to have completed the spring 2010 program (even if you’re a senior) and have not missed more than 6 days in the entire 10 week spring 2010 term.

Foldingsheets is calling for entries for the summer of 2010. We are looking for Apprentices that would like to continue to post to their blog twice a month starting in May, ending in September 30th 2010.

Requirements
Post to your blog twice a month. No post with-in a week of the other, all posts must have a title, tags, content and be categorized.

The post must fulfill the requirements of the following: An original short story, fictional story, editorial work, pop culture review…etc.

What are the prizes?
Yes, we have prizes. The top 5 bloggers will have a choice between 2 tote bags, an 2gig MP3 player and 2 cloth covered journals. That’s prizes for the top 5 bloggers!

You will be disqualified if we find that any of the work is plagiarized, you do not post a minimum of 2 blog posts a month, post any of those two with in 7 days of each other, your work doesn’t have tags, title and category.

You can of course add more than 2 posts a month. You will not win this contest by volume, but be judged at the end by the quality and body of your work + if you followed directions listed above.

Good luck Foldingsheets.com blogger’s!

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Chicago Botanic Gardens Photo Contest

The Chicago Botanic Gardens is sponsoring a digital photography contest and are taking entries between Entries accepted April 1 – June 21, 2010

Winners announced July 1, 2010

The winners will have his or her photograph featured on their website, which is seen by close to a million people each year. The grand prize winners will each receive complimentary one year memberships to the Chicago Botanic Garden.

Many apprentices have visited the gardens and I hope all of you enter one of yoru photos into the contest.

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Group Blogs

From the start, the Foldingsheets.com website allows the ASM apprentices to publish their work online for the world to view and begin to understand what ASM Photojournalism is all about. Now, ASM Photojournalism is taking a new direction: Group blogs. This new format is a way for the website to have a magazine feel while still maintaining the classic Folding Sheets look. These group blogs include posts about sports, entertainment, sci-fi, poems, visual art, random teen expression and fiction. Our groups include the…

Eye Catchers, who now work on anything that’s related to entertainment: sports, music, art, movies.

Pennyworth Stories which include mystery, comedy, romance and horror. The Peculiar Case of Samuel is an interesting story is an interesting story on the blog.

Etched- This blog takes a whole new spin as visual art will be available to the Folding Sheets website. This blog utilizes many uses of drawing, Photoshop and of course, Photography.

Talking to the Bunny Mushrooms- A fun group that include whatever random ideas that come to
mind.

Sci-Flyers- A group influenced by manga and anime that writes fantasy and science fiction.

Poem Fever- A group that fuses comedy with poetry. Recently, they’ve been working on our love for spaghetti and related foods.

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No Cussing Club

join the No Cussing Club at www.nocussingclub.com

It will be worth your god damn time!!!!!!

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What are Gravatars?

Photo by: Robert R Gigliotti

If you’re a bloger, you’re probably wondering how people get their own icons next to their comments on blogs? And or when you comment, you have some sort of default icon next to you…? Well, its called a Gravatar and below is what Gravatar’s website says…

Your Gravatar is an image that follows you from site to site appearing beside your name when you do things like comment or post on a blog. Avatars help identify your posts on blogs and web forums, so why not on any site?

Click here and you can set up your Gravtar…all you have to do is send your email to them…they’ll send you a confirmation link. You the email you typically use when you comment on someone’s blog. After you click on the link, you upload a photo and that’s it! Super easy. I (Robert, the Admin) commented on this post below. My Gravtar is the Sears Tower (ok, its the Willis Tower actually). Why not personalize your comments and one someone see’s your Gravtar, they’ll know right away its you.

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Introduction to Blogging

Wordpress

Wordpress

With all this blogging going on here at Foldingsheets.com and with our fellow Apprentices, I thought it could be helpful to post some information about what blogs are and how they work. I’ve pulled this content from WordPress’s introduction to blogging page.

Most of us know what a blog or website is. What i’d like to focus on here is how we can communicate with blogs or other users of blogs and how we can organize large amounts of information with the help of blogging software like WordPress. Below is a list of things bloggers need to know…

Archives
A blog is also a good way to keep track of articles on a site. A lot of blogs feature an archive based on dates (like a monthly or yearly archive). The front page of a blog may feature a calendar of dates linked to daily archives. Archives can also be based on categories featuring all the articles related to a specific category.

It does not stop there; you can also archive your posts by author or alphabetically. The possibilities are endless. This ability to organize and present articles in a composed fashion is much of what makes blogging a popular personal publishing tool.

Feeds
A Feed is a function of special software that allows “Feedreaders” to access a site automatically looking for new content and then post updates about that new content to another site. This provides a way for users to keep up with the latest and hottest information posted on different blogging sites. Some Feeds include RSS (alternately defined as “Rich Site Summary” or “Really Simple Syndication”), Atom or RDF files.

Blogrolls
A blogroll is a list, sometimes categorized, of links to webpages the author of a blog finds worthwhile or interesting. The links in a blogroll are usually to other blogs with similar interests. The blogroll is often in a “sidebar” on the page or featured as a dedicated separate web page. BlogRolling and blo.gs are two websites that provide some interesting functions or help related to blogrolls. These sites provide methods for users to maintain these rolls effortlessly and integrate them into weblogs. WordPress has a built-in Link Manager so users do not have to depend on a third party for creating and managing their blogroll.

Syndication
A feed is a machine readable (usually XML) content publication that is updated regularly. Many weblogs publish a feed (usually RSS, but also possibly Atom and RDF and so on, as described above). There are tools out there that call themselves “feedreaders”. What they do is they keep checking specified blogs to see if they have been updated, and when the blogs are updated, they display the new post, and a link to it, with an excerpt (or the whole contents) of the post. Each feed contains items that are published over time. When checking a feed, the feedreader is actually looking for new items. New items are automatically discovered and downloaded for you to read. Just so you don’t have to visit all the blogs you are interested in. All you have to do with these feedreaders is to add the link to the RSS feed of all the blogs you are interested in. The feedreader will then inform you when any of the blogs have new posts in them. Most blogs have these “Syndication” feeds available for the readers to use.

Managing Comments
One of the most exciting features of blogging tools are the comments. This highly interactive feature allows users to comment upon article posts and link to your posts and comment on and recommend them. These are known as trackbacks and pingbacks . We’ll also discuss how to moderate and manage comments and how to deal with the annoying trend in “comment spam”, when unwanted comments are posted to your blog.

Trackbacks
In a nutshell, TrackBack was designed to provide a method of notification between websites: it is a method of person A saying to person B, “This is something you may be interested in.” To do that, person A sends a TrackBack ping to person B.

A better explanation is this:

  • Person A writes something on their blog.
  • Person B wants to comment on Person A’s blog, but wants her own readers to see what she had to say, and be able to comment on her own blog
  • Person B posts on her own blog and sends a trackback to Person A’s blog
  • Person A’s blog receives the trackback, and displays it as a comment to the original post. This comment contains a link to Person B’s post

The idea here is that more people are introduced to the conversation (both Person A’s and Person B’s readers can follow links to the other’s post), and that there is a level of authenticity to the trackback comments because they originated from another weblog. Unfortunately, there is no actual verification performed on the incoming trackback, and indeed they can even be faked.

Most trackbacks send to Person A only a small portion (called an “excerpt”) of what Person B had to say. This is meant to act as a “teaser”, letting Person A (and his readers) see some of what Person B had to say, and encouraging them all to click over to Person B’s site to read the rest (and possibly comment).

Person B’s trackback to Person A’s blog generally gets posted along with all the comments. This means that Person A can edit the contents of the trackback on his own server, which means that the whole idea of “authenticity” isn’t really solved. (Note: Person A can only edit the contents of the trackback on his own site. He cannot edit the post on Person B’s site that sent the trackback.)

Comment Moderation
Comment Moderation is a feature which allows the website owner and author to monitor and control the comments on the different article posts, and can help in tackling comment spam. It lets you moderate comments, & you can delete unwanted comments, approve cool comments and make other decisions about the comments.

Comment Spam
Comment Spam
refers to useless comments (or trackbacks, or pingbacks) to posts on a blog. These are often irrelevant to the context value of the post. They can contain one or more links to other websites or domains. Spammers use Comment Spam as a medium to get higher page rank for their domains in Google, so that they can sell those domains at a higher price sometime in future or to obtain a high ranking in search results for an existing website.

Spammers are relentless; because there can be substantial money involved, they work hard at their “job.” They even build automated tools (robots) to rapidly submit their spam to the same or multiple weblogs. Many webloggers, especially beginners, sometimes feel overwhelmed by Comment Spam.

There are solutions, though, to avoiding Comment Spam. WordPress includes many tools for combating Comment Spam. With a little up front effort, Comment Spam can be manageable, and certainly no reason to give up weblogging.

Pretty Permalinks
Permalinks
are the permanent URLs to your individual weblog posts, as well as categories and other lists of weblog postings. A permalink is what another weblogger will use to refer to your article (or section), or how you might send a link to your story in an e-mail message. Because others may link to your individual postings, the URL to that article shouldn’t change. Permalinks are intended to be permanent (valid for a long time).

“Pretty” Permalinks is the idea that URLs are frequently visible to the people who click them, and should therefore be crafted in such a way that they make sense, and not be filled with incomprehensible parameters. The best Permalinks are “hackable,” meaning a user might modify the link text in their browser to navigate to another section or listing of the weblog. For example, this is how the default Permalink to a story might look in a default WordPress installation:

/index.php?p=423

How is a user to know what “p” represents? Where did the number 423 come from?

In contrast, here is a well-structured, “Pretty” Permalink which could link to the same article, once the installation is configured to modify permalinks:

/archives/2003/05/23/my-cheese-sandwich/

One can easily guess that the Permalink includes the date of the posting, and the title, just by looking at the URL. One might also guess that hacking the URL to be /archives/2003/05/ would get a list of all the postings from May of 2003. Pretty (cool). For more information on possible Permalink patterns in WordPress, see Using Permalinks.

Blog by Email
Some blogging tools offer the ability to email your posts directly to your blog, all without direct interaction through the blogging tool interface. WordPress offers this cool feature. Using email, you can now send in your post content to a pre-determined email address & voila! Your post is published!

Post Slugs
If you’re using Pretty Permalinks, the Post Slug is the title of your article post within the link. The blogging tool software may simplify or truncate your title into a more appropriate form for using as a link. A title such as “I’ll Make A Wish” might be truncated to “ill-make-a-wish”. In WordPress, you can change the Post Slug to something else, like “make-a-wish”, which sounds better than a wish made when sick.

Excerpt
Excerpts are condensed summaries of your blog posts, with blogging tools being able to handle these in various ways. In WordPress, Excerpts can be specifically written to summarize the post, or generated automatically by using the first few paragraphs of a post or using the post up to a specific point, assigned by you.

Plugins
Plugins
are cool bits of programming scripts that add additional functionality to your blog. These are often features which either enhance already available features or add them to your site.

WordPress offers simple and easy ways of adding Plugins to your blog. From the Administraton Panel, there is a Plugin Page. Once you have uploaded a Plugin to your WordPress plugin directory, activate it from the Plugins Management SubPanel, and sit back and watch your Plugin work. Not all Plugins are so easily installed, but WordPress Plugin authors and developers make the process as easy as possible.

Basics – A Few Blogging Tips from WordPress
Starting a new blog is difficult and this can put many people off, there are then other people who have blogs with no comments or visits. You want to stand out from this crowd of millions of bloggers, you want to be one of the few hundred thousand blogs that are actually visited. So here are some simple tips to help you on your way to blogging mastery:

  1. Post regularly, but don’t post if you have nothing worth posting about.
  2. Stick with only a few specific genres to talk about.
  3. Don’t put ‘subscribe’ and ‘vote me’ links all over the front page until you have people that like your blog enough to ignore them (they’re usually just in the way).
  4. Use a clean and simple theme if at all possible.
  5. Enjoy, blog for fun, comment on other peoples’ blogs (as they normally visit back).

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Apprentice Surveys

We set up an on-line survey to let the Apprentices voices be heard. We asked several questions as they related to Photo Journaling. The results have been posted below. Only the Top three answers have been posted…If you’d like to participate in our on-line user polls, you can do so by clicking here…

——————————

What would you like to see more of in Photo Journaling?

Answer

Vote Count

Digital Photography lessons 13 Votes(30%)
Photoshop lessons 12 Votes(27%)
Poetry writing 6 Votes(13%)

——————————

How much are you enjoying this program?

Answer

Vote Count

Love it 6 Votes(27%)
Its ok 12 Votes(54%)
I think it could be better 2 Votes(9%)

——————————

How could the program be better?

Answer

Vote Count

Less writing, more photography 9 Votes(39%)
Less about blogging, more writing 4 Votes(17%)
More writing and photography 3 Votes(13%)
I like it the way it is, don’t change a thing. 3 Votes(13%)

——————————

Do you like having your own blog?

Answer

Vote Count

Yes, I can’t wait to add to it. 3 Votes(13%)
Yeah, its cool. 16 Votes(72%)
I don’t care 3 Votes(13%)

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Do you like the Foldingsheets.com website?

Answer

Vote Count

Yeah, its cool. 12 Votes(54%)
I think its ok. 9 Votes(40%)
I think it should be redesigned 1 Votes(4%)

——————————

Who do you like better?

Answer

Vote Count

Chris 5 Votes(21%)
I like them both the same 8 Votes(34%)
This is a dumb question 9 Votes(39%)

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What is your favorite thing to do in Photo journaling?

Answer

Vote Count

Take photos 19 Votes(29%)
Photoshop 11 Votes(17%)
group discussion 7 Votes(10%)

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Did you enjoy the field trip?

Answer

Vote Count

I wish we went someplace else 2 Votes(13%)
I love it, can we go back in the Spring? 10 Votes(66%)
It was ok 2 Votes(13%)

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Where would you like to go on a field trip?

Answer

Vote Count

Downtown 19 Votes(100%)

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Chicago Botanic Gardens Field Trip 2009

Photo Journaling planned a field trip to the Chicago Botanic Gardens this Fall expecting cold and possibly bad weather. We were pleasantly surprised when it was sunny and nearly 70 degrees the entire day. The Apprentices were given details for an photography scavenger hunt around the gardens to help build their portfolio. The Apprentices work will be posted here shortly. Robert R Gigliotti brought his camera and got the Apprentices in action capturing everything on their list. As we do every year, we also did a group photo of the Apprentices.

Posted in Photo Journaling, Photography2 Comments

Prairie Maze By: Samantha Burke

2007.06.02
“Come on Linda,” her friend Mina said, “I dare you to go into the maze.”

It was a beautiful night like any other night at the Botanic Garden being gazed by the full moon. All was quiet at the lovely garden except for Linda who was being dared by Mina to go into the maze.

“Well?” Mina asked with her eyebrow raised.
Linda looked at her confused, “Well, what?”
“Are you going?”
“Well?”
“Come on! What are you chicken?”

Instead of backing out Linda gathered her courage and went into the maze. At first it was easy to get through most of the maze well except reaching dead ends were always there in the paths of the maze like puzzles never to be solved which was expected inside the maze. Suddenly a sound of a stick broke from the distance.

“Mina? Is that you?”

Linda felt a heavy breath behind her neck while hearing a soft growl, she wasn’t sure to turn around or run. She started to slowly turn around to see what it was, a red glow from the dark. Linda shook with uncontrollable fear as she slowly walked backed away from it as the monster started to go slowly walk towards her. She screamed so loud, echoes was heard in the wind.

She began to ran from the monster as fast as she was she can outrun the monster, she managed to get out of the maze to the parking lot of the Botanic Gardens, and goes to the main entrance. Across the street Linda sees Mina sitting on her red convertible nearly in a dead sleep until Linda screamed nearly scared Mina.

Linda said to Mina, “Mina get in the car!”
Mina asked confused, “Why?”
“Just do it!”

The girls got in the car and began to start it only one problem, it wouldn’t start. Mina suddenly looked at the window on the driver’s side to see the monster. It was some form of mutant hybrid of a demonic prairie dog and a wolf.

The girls said, “Oh my god!”
Linda said, “Mina start the car!”
“I am trying!”
“Start it now!”

The car then started and the girls drove away from the monster. The monster stood on the road and dropped its head in sadness until it got splattered by a truck.

The End or is it? Yes, it is.

Posted in Photo Journaling, Playwrighting0 Comments


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