View allAll Photos Tagged CWD
cwd2841 ~ Crooked. Usually, we line everything up perfectly straight. What happens if your composition is slightly askew?
I love a nice wonky horizon and have used it a lot in the past. I quite liked this archway in the University of Nottingham's Trent Building, so took a few shots. I used the built-in HDR mode on my iPhone (it takes 3 photos and blends them in) and then subsequently edited it in Camera+
Class with Daves: 16 weeks behind: Textures - Make us want to reach out and touch your photo, to feel the texture.
This friendly guy and his friends live in NCTU campus. These homeless dogs was fed by some volunteers from this university so my friend calls them school dogs. They will be happy if you want to pat them.
Trying to get my assignment done for Take a class with Dave group. Can I change my status to pass/fail?
Cheyanne got a Barbie for Christmas and she let Remmy play with her. Barbie is a chef, so they were fighting over who got to play with Barbie and who got to be the "action guy".
cwd1261 ~ Freeze Frame - It's not just a J. Giles Band song...it's a CWD assignment! Capture something that you can't see with your naked eye. Stop motion. Fast shutter speed, baby. No blur!
I have a huge drawer full of cereal packages - (did´nt make an interesting shot...) - we are three in the house and we all like to have different choices for our breakfast... - to give you an example there is Cheerios, Honey Nut, Kellog´s korn flakes, Special K, Bran flakes, Wheetos, regular oatmeal and Müsli... - writing it down makes it sound crazy...
but
never mix sex with cereal!!!
thinking of assignment 1. Cereal. I read an advertisement for a cereal restaurant the other day that said 66% of Americans surveyed said they enjoyed sex, but 94% said they loved cereal! How much do you love cereal? Tag with cwd421
for CWD:
Landscape with a foreground element. The French have a wonderfully obscure term for this technique - repoussoir. It has to do with pushing. Anyway, landscapes can often be a bit boring, putting something in the foreground really helps the viewer get into the image.
I'm thrilled I found something today to work for this assignment. I have a shot with a cool red machine of some sort in it, too, but it sort of overwhelmed the landscape, so I picked this one for the assignment instead.
This was on the grounds of a delightfully abandoned dairy farm I ran across in snohomish, off of highway 9. I'll post the rest of the photos from there today or tomorrow (after I post the rest of the photos from dad's birthday).
playing with assignment #1. The portrait. Looking over the list I was surprised we hadn't seen this one yet. Naturally I need to add a caveat that self-portraits are forbidden. You must work with someone else to create a photo that helps the viewer to truly know the subject. Tag with cwd111.
I´m sad to say but I have had so little time this week for Dave & Dave - still I want to be one of the cool kids and finish my assignments... so my daughter was "attacked" in front of the mirror - with ok results I think...
Dave told me I should make a gold star mosaic while the number was nice and even, so here you go! ;) Thanks, Dave! Check out Take a Class with Dave and Dave.
1. rest [week 16: night redux]
2. dash [week 16: the street]
3. yin of roof, yang of sky [week 16: yin-yang]
4. international fountain [week 15: hometown postcard]
5. 2/3 [week 14: abstract]
6. reflected sky [week 14: sky]
7. solo [week 13: frozen time]
8. 96: hover [week 12: 8 seconds]
9. float on [week 12: water, small scale]
10. wet and rust and orange [week 12: grit]
11. grin [week 11: portrait]
12. 84: extraction [week 10: the matrix]
13. statue [week 10: bodyscape]
14. stark [week 10: b&w architecture redux]
15. attached [week 9: fill the frame]
16. 68: picasso's jacqueline [week 8: art recreation]
17. look to the heavens [week 8: religion]
18. Like anyone would park here anyway [week 8: street signs]
19. 47: if we're adding to the noise, turn off this song [week 5: music]
20. McChesney: midnight in the garden? [week 4: b&w architecture]
21. up [week 3: wide angle]
22. show me the fish! [week 3: environmental portrait]
23. 26: outtake: weariness [week 2: emotion]
24. 20: outtake: pileup [week 1: hands]
25. Pout [week 1: tells a story]
Created with fd's Flickr Toys.
cwd2862 ~ Timeless Take a photo that could have been taken at
any point in the history of time, including all the way back to when
the dinosaurs roamed the land. In other words take a photo that shows
no evidence of 'man' whatsoever-- it'll be all natural.
This jungle belongs to whoever owns the old building yard that extends past the bottom of our garden. No humans in here, only birds, insects and the odd fox