Styles of Triptych
Colors, telling a story-progression, one location piecing it all together, shapes-all 3 use the same element of shape, textures, lighting, tone, theme links them together, emotions, using the same extreme angle with all images, same subject, lines link images
Brainstorming
Ice cream- progression, landscape- using different landscapes with lines leading across the images, swimming- blocks, pool, bleachers with bags and people, angles- using a arch in every photo
Subject: ice cream, railroad, the woods, swimming, grocery, park, downtown, chair, basketball, school, clouds
Theme: railroad, park, grocery, downtown, food, swimming, school, restaurant, camping, plants, kitchen, farm, transportation
Event or story: ice cream: getting the cream, eating it, it falling on the ground, downtown: waling through down time 

Sketches
For my first triptych my inspiration was Ansel Adams. Ansel Adams photography was landscape, recreating historical photos, and he used a film camera. I used inspired by the look the film camera brought to the photos. In my triptych I used the vignette and used a pre-set to make make images have the film camera look. I thought my triptych turned out well, the texture was brought out with the black and white pre-set. 
I could have found a better angle to shot at so all of the lines and angles didn't make it look so busy. But overall I am happy with the triptych, the texture, and the film look. 
When I was out to take some photos in the mountains. I found these old cabins and loved the texture in them. While I was experimenting with the windows I found that you could get a reflection go the mountains in the window. I knew I wanted to use this image in one of my triptychs. When I first started developing and putting together my triptychs, I was using all mountain photos but I thought that they didn't go together very well. So I changed to the cabin photos and one mountains picture. Going with the theme of "In the Mountains".
I think I could have challenged myself more in the triptych. The cabin photos are too simple. 
Triptychs
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Triptychs

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Creative Fields