Big Spiders, Big Trees, and Mr. Muir’s Big Rock
Spiders.
Not just one or two. Hundreds, maybe thousands.
Huge, hairy, scary ones.
Crossing the road, headed toward us.
Runnnnnnnnn!
Spiders.
Not just one or two. Hundreds, maybe thousands.
Huge, hairy, scary ones.
Crossing the road, headed toward us.
Runnnnnnnnn!
Storytelling, whether done orally such as in the passing of traditional folklore from one generation to another, through pictures scratched on cave walls, or the printed word, has gone on for thousands of years.
Things started to get complicated once everyone could afford a box camera, and yet more complicated when 8mm movie and 35mm still photo cameras came on the scene, along with slide and movie projectors.
But with the arrival of smartphones, tablets, and computers, photo and video editing apps and Websites that allow users to create “magazine-slick” visual essays, now you can meld oral, visual, and written elements into a visual story.
So what’s the best and easiest way to use photos to tell the story of your trip visually these days?
Here are three options from which you can choose.
Around 30,000 years ago, the “French” developed a way of telling a story visually.
But over thousands of years, we became less skilled at combining multiple images into a story. Then in this century, we came up with imaginative ways to create and share visual stories.