Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - What major can I study post-production and photography in university?

What major can I study post-production and photography in university?

I think I am qualified to answer this question. My major in college is educational technology. Speaking of this, many people don't understand what educational technology is, and I don't intend to explain this major from an academic point of view. I just want to say that educational technology is an engineering course, with a wide range of things to learn, but not deep enough. In college, we studied photography theory, darkroom technology, photoshop in computer science, and even camera shooting and post-editing. Therefore, many majors offered by universities may involve post-pictures and photography knowledge, but the most professional is photography.

With the reform and innovation of school disciplines, many schools have set up photography majors or related majors. In addition to the compulsory public courses in universities, photography majors mainly offer courses such as art introduction, painting foundation, film aesthetics, color, plane composition, three-dimensional animation, photography technology and composition, audio-visual language, photography art, TV editing, digital production, editing technology and appreciation of film and television works. After all, as a major, we should stick to the key word photography and start professional study around it. You can learn what you want from it.

Of course, many photographic works are inseparable from post-production now. Some photography colleges will also develop some post-processing software such as photoshop and 3DMax. But you can't learn anything from school if you want to improve your skills, can you? The teacher led the door? However, the later technology still depends on personal efforts and constant thinking. Many computer-related majors and art design-related majors have also set up the study of post-production software for pictures. So if you just want to learn post-production of pictures, other majors in some schools can also meet this requirement. For example, I studied educational technology, such as journalism, advertising design and so on.

University courses focus on teaching some theoretical knowledge. With regard to post-pictures and photography techniques, I think the focus is still on the practical level. Usually browse more photographic works, learn from other people's experience, make more pictures, make continuous progress in practice, and then apply the progress to practice, so that the level of photography can become more and more refined. Master in the folk, sometimes spontaneous learning and interest-driven creation, will bloom with different brilliance.