Diary Entry:
Save the Children is an organization that works for educating, and providing for children in countries where they are not given the necessities of life. For this contest we were to take pictures of universal education. I had a few ideas on what to take pictures of for
the contest. The theme was universal education. Somehow I had to capture this at my school. The universal part would be somewhat easy because my school has many people from different backgrounds. My ideas were to have a child sitting down reading a very large book, maybe twice his size. For my next picture, I wanted to have two children looking at a teacher when she is explaining something. My last one was to have one child helping out the other on a project. Though my final pictures changed from my original ideas, I was still able to try out some of my ideas as well as create new ones.
Theory Notes:Inspi(RED)™:
RED is not a charity or a cause, but rather an idea. People buy their products and up to 50 cents of the profits go towards buying antiretroviral medicine to people
dying of AIDS in Africa. Some very famous brands have taken part in RED. Some are Apple, Dell, Converse, Gap, and Nike.
Their media supporters are Facebook, Vanity Fair, HBO, and Elle are a few. These are the mediums in which they get their message across.
Also, here is a video of some famous athletes, promoted by Nike, advertising their new tennis shoe laces that support their fight against AIDS in Africa.
Nike RED
Gap Inc.:
Gap Inc.'s rules to succes aretat they replace their stock very quickly, and their prices are always guaranteed to be low. Gap knows how to stick to the basics, same jeans with few styles and shirts, in several different colors. Much of the success and growth of the company was due to the advertisement by Levi Strauss, since Ga



Image Bank +:
Abbie Trayler-Smith was born in South Whales in 1977. She went to college in London, for a degree in law, and picked up photography. She took pictures for the school newspaper. By 1998, she got a job working for the Daily Telegraph. The amazing thing about her, is that she taught herself everything she knew when she got the job. Much of her work today, consists of anniversaries from fighting or natural distasters. For example, Pearl Harbour anniversary, in Hawaaii, and the conflict in Darfur. She has clients, but spends a lot of time on her own projects. Here is a picture from one of her documentaries that I find says a lot about the place she photographed this: Yemen. http://abbietraylersmith.com/biography.html

Their media supporters are Facebook, Vanity Fair, HBO, and Elle are a few. These are the mediums in which they get their message across.
Also, here is a video of some famous athletes, promoted by Nike, advertising their new tennis shoe laces that support their fight against AIDS in Africa.
Nike RED
Gap Inc.:
Gap Inc.'s rules to succes aretat they replace their stock very quickly, and their prices are always guaranteed to be low. Gap knows how to stick to the basics, same jeans with few styles and shirts, in several different colors. Much of the success and growth of the company was due to the advertisement by Levi Strauss, since Ga
p used their jeans in their stores. Levi Strauss actually provided all of Gap's merchandise in the beginning.
During 1973, Gap started producing its own products, and using
During 1973, Gap started producing its own products, and using
other brands, along with Levi. A few years after, in 1975, he Gap stores ha
d $100 million in net sales. There was a small slump when the owners, the Fishers, were trying to expand on more than just their jeans and shirts, as well as attempt to appeal to an older age group. After a while, they were liquidated, because it didn't make much of a success.
Soon, Levi jeans and apparel were being sold in department stores, and people no longer had to go to Gap Inc. to get it. They needed something new and
Soon, Levi jeans and apparel were being sold in department stores, and people no longer had to go to Gap Inc. to get it. They needed something new and
fresh
to attract attention again. Gap's own personal brand gained about
45% of their total sales in 1980. Although the sales were good, if they were to stay up to speed, they would have to have an image, with just Gap as the label. In the late 1990's Gap became too "trendy" and decided that it needed to go back to the basics, bas
ic tees and jeans that is. The did this by using ads in commercials on their Gap Easy Fit Jeans with celebrities. 

Not much after that, they began the online gap.com, where shoppers could purchase clothes online. The next year sales went up to $9 billion and 356 new stores opened. From 1984 to 1989, the company grew 24,000 percent. When the new millenium hit, sales dropped by 5%, and by 2001, there was a $7.7 million loss. A writer from the National Post said it was because they lost touch with the customer and they didn't have the same cheap prices people had once been used to. By 2002, the company had changed to focusing on customer research, new advertising, and closing some stores down. The net income was brought back up yo $477 million. Though the economy has since, made the people of Gap somewhat skeptical, they are overall very confident in their name and their time-lasting fashion.
Here, in this picture below, Gap joined with Red, and added some of that merchandise to its line.http://www.fundinguniverse.com/company-histories/The-Gap-Inc-Company-History.html

picture link

picture link
Printing Composition:

If one is quiet and still, they may see the great lessons that are being instilled and practiced by children around the world.

This picture shows a young girl, ready to work and learn new things that will be beneficial to herself, as well as the people around her.

A young mind that aspires to learn is the greatest gift a child could give to their community and the world.
Image Bank +:
Abbie Trayler-Smith was born in South Whales in 1977. She went to college in London, for a degree in law, and picked up photography. She took pictures for the school newspaper. By 1998, she got a job working for the Daily Telegraph. The amazing thing about her, is that she taught herself everything she knew when she got the job. Much of her work today, consists of anniversaries from fighting or natural distasters. For example, Pearl Harbour anniversary, in Hawaaii, and the conflict in Darfur. She has clients, but spends a lot of time on her own projects. Here is a picture from one of her documentaries that I find says a lot about the place she photographed this: Yemen. http://abbietraylersmith.com/biography.html

This is a picture of the women in Yemen going to school. They can only have a teacher that is a woman because of the status of women and men there, and how men are looked on more highly than women. But I see that the fact that the women are getting education is a step in the right direction. Also, what is interesting that the women, even when they are not out in the public around men, they still have to keep their faces covered, around other women. This picture says so much more than the women of Yemen getting an education. It gives thought to what kind of society these women live in and the culture of the Middle East.











