View allAll Photos Tagged CWD
Birthday decorations in my cube at work.
cwd492: High Key/Low Key Diptych - We did High Key in Week 15, Low Key in Week 23, and Diptych in Week 20. For Week 49, let's combine all three to create a diptych with one high key photo and one low key photo.
cwd2471 ~ Double Exposure Create a double exposure either in camera or in post processing. Sometimes I think this is harder in camera because it cannot be change, but if you're camera cannot do a double exposure, do it in Photoshop or whatever post processing software you have.
Jason Williams, right, talks about his experience at Hyaets, an intentional Christian community in Charlotte.
Upside Down. From CWD Admin: I hope I’ve commented before that a photo becomes instantly more interesting when it shows us something the eye cannot normally see. Motion blur, Macro shots, Cutouts, and my personal fave, wide angle. But there’s another way I saw demonstrated at the Met that is often overlooked. Upside Down. The featured picture from the early 20th century showed a view out a third story window of people walking down the street. I became more interesting the instant the artist displayed it upside down. The viewer is disoriented, uneasy. The work succeeds. Create an interesting image by turning the image from your camera upside down.