Drilldown: CapGrads
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Always go for what you’ve always felt attached to or engaged with; show others your creative side. (1) ·
Do it. (1) ·
Do what you love and know. (1) ·
I think that really making it about something you're already passionate about is super important. It's only as much extra work as you make it really. My paper is fairly concise but it's the accumulation of work I've been doing for a long time. Don't write it off immediately and finish it in the end, (1) ·
I want to tell all the rising seniors to strive for what you want in life and don't give up because God has a plan for everyone have faith. (1) ·
If you're doing darkroom photography, don't give up. The stress and the aggravation is worth it. If you have given photography, especially film, a try and didn't like it—that's okay! (1) ·
Stick to what you enjoy, otherwise you'll never get it done. (1) ·
When you get an idea, make sure it's you—that it has a meaning to you—and make sure the people that see it know that is what you want to do in the future. (1)
I will be showcasing my photos. Visit [https://zachariahphotography.com/ Zachariah Photography]. (1) ·
I will be showing you different drawings of water and land animals. (1) ·
I wrote a few chapters of my fictional novel, as well as wrote out some notes for myself to help me imagine the world as I write it. (1) ·
My capstone is a summary (more or less) of the work I've been doing on myself over the past 3ish years and what I have learned over that time. At first it was more physical, but it turns out that way more work had to be done mentally. It was originally longer but I trimmed out parts that weren't nee (1) ·
My project is artwork and painting, realistic and cartoon. A lot of different colors. (1) ·
My project is over what I've learned through the years I’ve been engaged with photography. Also, how I got into doing photography and what made me find my style in photography. (1) ·
Urban darkroom photography that has been shot around Downtown Tulsa. (1) ·
When I was enrolled in the TV production program at Tulsa Tech me and some friends set out to create a sitcom. I am presenting a part of the script I had written for the series. (1)
A 8 part sitcom series. (1) ·
A poster-board paired with a paper I'd write on learning how to learn. (1) ·
I started with the children's museum and then I moved to art. (1) ·
I started with the intention to write the whole book, which would look somewhere around 20 or so chapters. I knew it wouldn't have happened in the end, but I wanted to set the end goal for myself. (1) ·
I started with what got me into photography and how it changed my point of view with art, and how to create stories behind the art from one’s view. (1) ·
Music to Darkroom photography (1) ·
My proposal was a history of art and why people keep making it. (1) ·
Photography was the starting project and is the continued project. (1)
None (1) ·
I had to ditch the poster-board aspect due to the circumstances, and my goals for me have evolved majorly since it was assigned as well. That lesson of learning how to learn is still very important, but now it's more focused on discipline and being emotionally healthy. (1) ·
I instead ended up writing 3 chapters and editing them, and, while I'm not the most proud of how they turned out, I'm glad I was able to finally put out some drafts for later writing. (1) ·
My plan did change because I wasn’t planning on making a video, I was planning on making a clear display with my photos hanging and lights around them with what I wrote in the center of my display. (1) ·
Things did go as planned when I moved to doing art work. I was doing the Children's museum and then I changed it to art because I know more about art. (1) ·
Things didn't exactly go as planned with everything going on (of course): I still have prints in the darkroom and all of my photo paper. I'm using what I already have, which in my opinion I think is still enough. (1) ·
We weren't able to film any of it. (1) ·
Yes Things went as planned and no nothing was adjusted. (1)
I became a better artist, and I had fewer screw-ups. I have a lot more experience than I do a year ago, for sure, especially with exposures and printing images. (1) ·
I learned a lot about me, and the "demons" I have. I feel not near as powerless as I did to them even just a little while ago. I'm learning to heal the mental things that need to be healed and grow in a healthy way, and not feel like a core part of me is a mistake and has to be hidden away. (1) ·
I learned that it takes time and focus. (1) ·
I learned that you shouldn't be afraid to put yourself out there. My takeaway is that this project is very important to me. (1) ·
I've grown immensely as a writer, both objectively and subjectively. I learned how to write and compose scenes of a narrative more clearly, and to make less mistakes and convey my image in better ways. The most important thing I gained from this project however, was better confidence in my own writi (1) ·
I’ve learned that one idea takes you to another, and becomes bigger than you were even planning on making it. (1) ·
That art work has been going on for a while and art can change your view of it (1) ·
Things often fall apart. (1)
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