View allAll Photos Tagged Depth
This photo stands out to me because recently I have been fascinated with fall colors and am constantly on the lookout for vibrant yellow and red leaves. Although I only took a photograph of one single leaf, I like that the picture says "fall is coming". Also, utilizing the depth of field technique makes the photo just a little bit more interesting, as opposed to taking a flat photograph.
f16 : 1/15
Depth of field
I learned that even lighting is difficult to find but makes all the difference.
This photo showcases a medium depth of field. This is obvious due to the fact that the branch is completely in focus, while the background is slightly blurred out but still in focus to the point where you are able to make out what is going on. Æ’/8.0
Trying to determine the depth from the surface, but unfortunately getting too much bounce from the walls.
Toys are 2 ft, 5 ft, 7 ft, 15 ft, 20 ft and 30 ft away from the camera; we used a tape measure to determine distance. The point of focus was 7 ft away. Watch the foreground and background objects change as the F-stop changes.
This picture is a good example of depth because I had to reduce the aperture significantly to blur out the mulch underneath. This required using a tripod.
Tanya Jensen, a chemistry major from Cedar City, helps out an SUU student by posing for an assignment. She is a great friend. Photo by Kylie Cox.
Along the side of the driveway at the farm, these wild daisies grace us with their presence every year.
The child in the foreground is in focus, while the others are less crisp. The lines draw one in to appreciate the depth.
I took this photo on telephoto lens and I thought it showed depth because my eye goes way to the back and then comes up to the front, to the rocks.
I took this picture when i was experimenting with exposure levels. The over exposure gives it a very small range of depth, but I still liked it. Its like the burning bush.
Depth (2004)
Unknown artist in collaboration with MTA
Using a nontraditional organic process, this artist painstakingly crafted this image of a tree over the course of years, using dirt, grime, and ferric oxide, one small dribble at a time. As the root system below becomes apparent, the viewer's gaze is drawn upward to the trunk, branches, and where the sky should be, an abrupt reminder of the depth of this platform, ten stories below the surface.
I like this photo because it's showing motion and depth of field. It was really windy that day, but I was able to stop my sons air as it was blowing in the wind. My son thought this was a funny moment, and by using depth of field I was able to focus in on his reaction to his hair flipping around in the wind. f/8.0 SS 1/125