View allAll Photos Tagged Depth
As flickr becomes swamped with autumn leaves and harvest moons Im desperately trying to hold on to the memories of summer. This was another experiment taken earlier in the year
Sinar Norma with homemade lens (a combination of an achromatic doublet from a telescope with a +3 closeup lens with a 49mm filter mount).
1/15th sec exposure, at approx f=250mm f/5.6. Adox CHS100. Xtol stock 10 mins (9mins would have been better). Contact print.
His name is Beastie. I took this photo right before the due time of this assignment, so it was late and the light is definitely not enough in the room. So I have no choice but to dial up the ISO to 800, even though there might be crazy amount of noise in the result.(I turned this photo into Black and White just to reduce the effect of the noise as much as possible) I use extremely shallow depth of field effect to highlight this cute creature.
In addition, I manually created the background by putting a lamp outside the blind door to make the background slightly more interesting.
4/52 - I totally forgot to upload my image last week!! I took this on the beach when I went to visit my mom with some friends. I bought this little hat cheap and I just wanted to use it in an image to create some texture!x
This image has a very small depth of field, because only the few pieces of grass that were directly in front of the camera are in focus. (home)
For my photography class, we had to show off the difference of depth of field by playing with the F-stops. I did one that was of a fence, and then I wanted to play with something he might not have seen before. Hence this. At F4.2, the sense of distance between lego-lady who can't possibly ride a bike as she has no knees is quite pronounced, with the background out of focus.
A little something I did with the photos I took from the tree corridors, used mirror and raw photograph to achive the desired effect, I really liked it.
#seene #3D
View in 3D with Open Seene App or visit URL: seene-shelter.github.io/viewer/#/?url=https://farm5.stati...
...engineering.
Can't really think much on what to say about this photo but I overheard a phrase from a commercial that said 'It's All About Engineering' while I was working on it. I stuck with it and it's somewhat fitting when you're an Oakley eyeglasses fan. Other than Ray-Ban, I think Oakleys have engineered and revolutionized sunglasses in the past decade with a more modern, 21st Century look. Enough of that bizwax, here's all you need to know:
Strobist info
• SB-800 with Lumiquest Minisoftbox III, set to 1/64th power triggered via CLS, above and slight left of camera
• On-camera flash to trigger speedlight wirelessly
• TV screen behind the sunglasses for backdrop and a touch of bokeh