View allAll Photos Tagged Composition
April 2015 earthquake: I have enjoyed Nepal, the vibrancy of Kathmandu, its monuments and its people and I feel for them at this time. If you are going to use any of my images on your blogs, reports, publications etc. please consider giving a donation to help the country and its people. My preferred charity is Medicins Sans Frontieres / Doctors Without Borders (www.msf.org,uk or www.msf.ch or other national sites)
April 2015 earthquake: I have enjoyed Nepal, the vibrancy of Kathmandu, its monuments and its people and I feel for them at this time. If you are going to use any of my images on your blogs, reports, publications etc. please consider giving a donation to help the country and its people. My preferred charity is Medicins Sans Frontieres / Doctors Without Borders (www.msf.org,uk or www.msf.ch or other national sites)
I was scouting for abstract compositions for a Daily Shoot, and I saw a half-eaten passionfruit, with what looked like a small leaf covering it. Unexpectedly, it turned out to be this green bug, sucking at the passionfruit.
For Macro Mondays "Unexpected" theme. HMM.
This one's a question. Which image is "better"? Taken from the same camera position. First image is a regular (17mm) shot from my "normal" height. For the second image the camera height is raised and the lens shifted down to compensate. Two very different perspectives - which one do you think is the better RE image?
For the composition assignment, I took a photo of a skylight inside of a dormitory at my Rose-Hullman. This photo meets the project requirements because it uses symmetrical balance throughout the picture. To take this photo, I pointed my camera straight up and tried to line up the reflections of the skylight so that they were symmetrical. In Photoshop, I used a curves layer to brighten the photo just a bit so that you could see more of the detail. Also, I used a clone stamp to get rid of the dirty spots on the skylight. I like the angle at which I shot this photo, But I wish that there was a more interesting subject in the skylight window. Overall, I am very satisfied with my photo.
And how to take a photo of a famous building and have it be composed somewhat interestingly. The suspended rod to other structure is supposed to be part of the interest. Maybe...or some people will just think it's distorted. Whatever...
North and east facing windows
unshaded because of wintertime bare trees. it is too cold to go out so I contemplate my lunch and find a still life there. Now I'm reading the booklet that came with the camera. It really is quite flexible and bends
to my will.
Scientific study by the Department of Human Nutrition of the Copenhagen University on "Body compositions in Ethiopian infants air displacement plethysmography from birth to six months of age" To know more: www.cosmed.com/peapod Source: globalhealth.ku.dk/events/2011/body_compositions_in_ethio...
8 pâquerettes et le symbole de l'infini avec les deux pétales de magnolia...
L'occasion de vous partager une très belle mélodie de Morten Lauridsen, d'après les poésies de Reiner Maria Rilke: les chansons des roses. Je ne sais pas pourquoi, mais cette mélodie me rappelle quelque chose...;-)
Abandon entouré d'abandon
Tendresse touchant aux tendresses...
C’est ton intérieur qui sans cesse
Se caresse, dirait-on ;
Se caresse en soi-même
Par son propre reflet éclairé
Ainsi tu inventes le thème
Du Narcisse exhaucé