We have transferred 11 readings from the Bird Library to the new reading room in Newhouse 3, which is on the fourth floor of Newhouse 3. Readings include books on lighting and set design, TV production, writing sitcoms, scripts from popular television shows, and more!
Archive for the ‘Lighting’ Category
Readings are now in the NH3 Reading Room
January 31, 2008Blog 1: Lighting and Set Design
January 16, 2008Lighting designers and set designers “see” their worlds very differently than normal, everyday people. They are translators of sorts: They translate 3D ideas into 2D imagery that in the end goes undetected through viewer sensors. Their efforts are, especially if they do an excellent job, unnoticed, unappreciated and invisible to the viewers they design for. The purpose of Blog 1 is to discuss why and how this is so and what strategies the lighting and set designers of your show employ in their translation process. Discuss examples of effective lighting and set design in a show of your choice. And don’t just say it’s good! Explain what exactly it is that makes it “good” and how techniques it uses might be applied to your own works.
Blogging Instructions: To comment on the blog, go to the bottom of the bottom of the post and click where it says “X Comments>>.” Enter your name and your syr.edu email address. Entering your email address ensures the WordPress server that you are a person and not a spammer, and it will allow us to keep track of who has and has not commented.You have two options when you comment. You can either directly address the question of the week, or react/respond/interact with another student’s entry or entries. You can interact with words, pictures, videos or anything that adds to the conversation. There is great value in either approach, but the more of the latter, the more the discussion will become “our own.”
READING MATERIALS THAT MIGHT HELP YOU ON THIS TOPIC:All below are at the reserve desk under TRF-452/652
- Light Science, by Thomas D. Rossing & Christopher J. Chiaverina, introducing the science and phenomena of light.
- Lighting for TV and Film, by Gerald Millerson, a broad coverage of the dynamics of lighting design.
- Lighting for Video, by Gerald Millerson, basic coverage of effective video lighting.
- Production Design for Television, by Terry Byrne, covering the culture and dynamics of television design.
OTHER THINGS THAT MIGHT HELP YOU ON THIS TOPIC:
- Paying close attention to lectures on lighting and design.
- Carefully and critically analyzing a television show beyond its surface.
- Check Semester Schedule for due date.
- Looking at these photos, examples of professional set design from CSI: New York and Cane:
Blog 1: Lighting & Set Design
August 29, 2007Lighting designers and set designers “see” their worlds very differently than normal, everyday people. They are translators of sorts: They translate 3D ideas into 2D imagery that in the end goes undetected through viewer sensors. Their efforts are, especially if they do an excellent job, unnoticed, unappreciated and invisible to the viewers they design for.
The purpose of Blog 1 is to discuss why and how this is so and what strategies the lighting and set designers of your show employ in their translation process. Discuss examples of effective lighting and set design in a show of your choice. And don’t just say it’s good! Explain what exactly it is that makes it “good” and how techniques it uses might be applied to your own works.
Blogging Instructions:
To comment on the blog, go to the bottom of the bottom of the post and click where it says “X Comments>>.” Enter your name and your syr.edu email address. Entering your email address ensures the WordPress server that you are a person and not a spammer, and it will allow us to keep track of who has and has not commented.
You have two options when you comment. You can either directly address the question of the week, or react/respond/interact with another student’s entry or entries. You can interact with words, pictures, videos or anything that adds to the conversation. There is great value in either approach, but the more of the latter, the more the discussion will become “our own.”
READING MATERIALS THAT MIGHT HELP YOU ON THIS TOPIC:
All below are at the reserve desk under TRF-452/652
- Light Science, by Thomas D. Rossing & Christopher J. Chiaverina, introducing the science and phenomena of light.
- Lighting for TV and Film, by Gerald Millerson, a broad coverage of the dynamics of lighting design.
- Lighting for Video, by Gerald Millerson, basic coverage of effective video lighting.
- Production Design for Television, by Terry Byrne, covering the culture and dynamics of television design.
OTHER THINGS THAT MIGHT HELP YOU ON THIS TOPIC:
- Paying close attention to lectures on lighting and design.
- Carefully and critically analyzing a television show beyond its surface.
- Check Semester Schedule for due date.