So, I'd like to introduce you now to an optional project which you may or may not choose to do, but I highly encourage you to do it. I think you'll have fun. This project is creating a portfolio. Now remember, you can use any phone, it can be your cell phone, it can be a professional camera, a semiprofessional camera, a compact, that doesn't matter. The exciting thing about this project is for you to take all the concepts that we talked about before, using color, using lines, the rule of two thirds and then using all those graphic elements like patterns and textures etc. And the idea is that you will create a portfolio using all of those different elements. So, it's a way for you to experiment with these ideas and learn to do it yourself. Right? Now, what I encourage you to do, is to think of a story that you'd like to document. So conceptualize a series of photos which tell a particular story. You might think how do I come up with a portfolio concept and what kinds of portfolios are interesting and which kinds of portfolios are less interesting. What I would do is choose something that's close to your heart and something that's very accessible to you. In other words, maybe you want to take portraits of people in your neighborhood, or what maybe you want to shoot architectural subjects, that doesn't matter. The important thing is that it's something that you actually find interesting and that you want to explore. So, what I'd ask you to do is to shoot a series of photos. Now, each one of those photos, what you should do is to take one of the aspects that we've talked about. For example, using patterns, so what you do is you take this idea of using patterns and you go out and you shoot a photo, specifically trying to accomplish that and play with it and see what happens, right? And then what we're going to do is, we're going to put together a PDF of all of our photos and you can upload those online in the forum for your peers to give you feedback on your photos. You might ask, can I use Photoshop on my project? Absolutely, you can. As long as the Photoshop that you use leads to telling the story in a better way, then do whatever you want. That's not the important thing. The important thing is to tell up a story about a particular subject, something that's interesting and make all the photos about that same subject. It's kind of like if you think of it as taking an idea or a concept and what you're doing is you're exploring it from many many different angles. And so, what you'll find is that by doing the project in this way rather than shooting photos of many many different things, what you do is you begin to see that you can see the same thing from many different angles. Now, you may might ask, why what does this portfolio project have to do with from brand to image? The answer is that it helps you to begin to understand the language of image making, actually put it into practice. And finally, if you're interested in photography, it will actually help you develop your own portfolio and develop this idea of storytelling. I highly encourage you to do it and I really look forward to seeing the projects that you come up with. Thanks.