Check out the link above to see the stop motion animation some of my classmates and I worked on in our multimedia class. Matt Stutzman provided us with the music he composed and our team came up with this idea. Thanks again, Courtney Satterfield, Tim Jones and Laurie Merritt for being such a great group and making this come to life in such a short amount of time. I'll never forget this amazing experience!
Friday, March 2, 2012
A time lapse of my drawing
Click the link below to see the time lapse video of me drawing the image above!
Here is a time lapse of me drawing one of the photographs I took. Photographed by Courtney Satterfield.
Thanks, Courtney, for taking the time to capture me in action. I love how it turned out.
Wednesday, February 22, 2012
Assignment 6 - Macro
Labels:
beads,
Brandi Hunt,
close up,
fabric,
lime,
macro,
nail polish,
paint,
pink,
scarf,
sequin,
thread
My little friend...
Labels:
asheboro,
Brandi Hunt,
buck tooth,
bug,
bug-eyed,
close up,
ladybug,
macro,
smile,
stop motion,
toy
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
OBX
Labels:
animals,
beach,
Brandi Hunt,
fish,
nature,
north carolina,
OBX,
Outer Banks,
seagull,
sunrise
Wednesday, February 8, 2012
Photography Students go to the Weatherspoon Art Museum

Randolph Community College’s second year photography students traveled to Greensboro today to check out two new photography exhibits being held at the Weatherspoon Museum at UNCG. Photographer, Richard Mosse’s new series, INFRA, is on display on the first floor. Mosse’s exhibit was full of landscapes captured using Kodak Aerochrome infrared film, which turned all normally green plant life into a surrealistic pink and red world. Students were amazed by the photographs’ vivid colors and the dreamlike quality they created. The other exhibit, To What Purpose? Photography as Art and Document, hosts several different photographers and is located on the second floor of the museum. Original plates of some of these photographs date back to 1869 with some of the newest photographs only dating back to 1999. Students enjoyed the variety of these documentation styled pieces just before sitting down to a photography talk hosted by the museum. Dr. Benjamin Filene, academic with a background in history museums, spoke at the event. He talked about cameras being called “machines that capture reality” and questioned students on their thoughts about that. Filene chose one photo in particular to analyze during the lecture, Nan Goldin’s photograph, Bruce’s Mirror. Students talked with Filene about the meaning of the photograph and different aspects of what the photograph was supposed to represent. What may have looked like a snapshot at first glance may have a million stories being told at once upon further inspection. For a better look, stop by the Weatherspoon Art Museum in Greensboro. Exhibits will be up until the middle of April 2012.
Monday, February 6, 2012
Sunday, February 5, 2012
Tuesday, January 31, 2012
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