Thursday, February 25, 2010
Sunday, February 7, 2010
Joshua's Photography Beltloop and Pin
Belt Loop
Complete these three requirements:
1. Point out the major features of a camera to your den or family and explain the function of each part.
Parts of the camera: lens, shutter, menu, red eye light, flash, screen, memory card, lens cover, case, and batter house.
2. Discuss with your den leader or adult partner, the benefits and contributions photography makes to modern life. Report what you learned to your den or family.
You take a picture of something important that someone else might want to look at. It might be important for the world to look at.
3. Using a camera, take at least 10 pictures of your family, pet, or scenery; show these to your den.
For the Pin I can choose 5 of the other requirements.
2. Look at a book of published photos about a subject that interests you. Find out what makes these photos remarkable and why people want to look at these pictures. Learn whether the photographer used light or angles to make the photos interesting. Discuss what you learned with an adult.
The National Geographic Book of Mammals is cool. The pictures are great. The animals are cool. There are some really close pictures. It looks like the people taking the pictures were in danger but mom says they used zoom. I like the underwater pictures.
3. Explain to an adult what “red eye” is and why it can happen in a picture. Show examples.
Red eye is when the flash shines off of the blood vessels in your eye.
4. Make a short video of a friend, family member, or pet, and show it to your den or family.
This is my dad making his prize winning chili for the superbowl party.
[URL=http://s291.photobucket.com/albums/ll296/mandystreasure/Cub%20Scouts/?action=view¤t=JoshuaPhotography002-1.flv][IMG]http://i291.photobucket.com/albums/ll296/mandystreasure/Cub%20Scouts/th_JoshuaPhotography002-1.jpg[/IMG][/URL]
5. With an adult’s help, use a photo-editing software feature to crop, lighten or darken, and change a photo.
6. Make a creative project using at least one photo.
Saturday, February 6, 2010
Webelos Outdoor Adventure
We went to the Mountains to the Sea trail. It was snowing and the ground was covered in ice, water, and mud.
On the trail we stopped and learned how to make an emergency shelter. We got a really large stick and leaned it against a tree. We put sticks leaned against the tree that was leaned against the big tree. We put dead leaves over the sticks that were leaned against the branch that was leaned against the tree. You are supposed to put a tarp over top of that and you have a waterproof shelter for the night. But we had to get back to the trail head. So we didn't put the tarp on.
-Calvin Webelos II
On the trail we stopped and learned how to make an emergency shelter. We got a really large stick and leaned it against a tree. We put sticks leaned against the tree that was leaned against the big tree. We put dead leaves over the sticks that were leaned against the branch that was leaned against the tree. You are supposed to put a tarp over top of that and you have a waterproof shelter for the night. But we had to get back to the trail head. So we didn't put the tarp on.
-Calvin Webelos II
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)