View allAll Photos Tagged Depth

Look at all the crap in my room!

More of the beautiful red hedges.

03Doug03 depth:Taken from the ground up of a sculpture of spinning wheels, due to its shape the picture still seems to move. The eye naturally moves with the shape.

I took this picture for this assignment because I used the widest angle and got the closest I could to the flower without it blurring.

Depth of field where the background is the main focus.

I took this photo a couple weeks ago while I was having fun with experimenting with longer shutter speeds on my camera. For this photo, I set the shutter speed to 1/4 of a second, and rotated my camera as I took the photo. The result is pretty cool, I think. The bride and groom are isolated from the crowd around them on the dance floor, and all the lights around them appear to be aura-like.

 

f/2.8 @ 1/4 second.

Processed with VSCO with c1 preset

This picture shows the depth of the photo as farther buildings are much smaller and get blurry in the end.

In this photo i was trying to get a bigger area and the day was gloomy so lighting was hard. I wanted to try to blur out more of the people and the stuff in the front and focus on the roller coaster but it was hard with it being so busy.

In this picture, I learned how to practice and use This medium lens to take an cool shot of this painting. The focus that I used for this photo was f/5.0. After learning that a lot of famous photographers were once painters, I decided to take this picture of nice painting.

Sharon Lockhart (American, born 1964)

Untitled, 1996

Chromogenic print

The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Purchase, Neuberger Berman Foundation Gift and Lila Acheson Wallace Gift, 2004 (2004.62)

03Fluty01 Depth

 

speed 1/500 f3.5. The front wheel wasn't spinning.

The cars seem to be going forward from a vanishing point.

Experimenting with depth of field at Ennerdale.

I like how the plant looks like and how vast the background is

I posted this photo because it seems fun and cartoonish to me. Although it's very blurry, it pops out. The color, the rims, the flag all just seemed to be so obvious yet very blurry. Motion. Color.

Photo from London. I personally love the depth in the picture, like the fact that you can see "Selfridges" on the sign in the "back" of the picture :)

detail of an artist's collage in the Art Building

Minnesota State Fair, August 2007

St. Paul, Minnesota

Field Number: IMG_5789

 

related posts on red Ravine:

MN State Fair On-A-Stick

MN State Fair On-A-Stick II - Video & Stats

Nightshot - Carousel

These large, blue butterflies are very elusive. To capture the shiny blue of their wings you have to snap them in flight, but they move very fast and erratically to avoid predation.

the layering of lenses presents a sense of depth to the composition. the lines of the wood in the foreground lead the viewer to the forms of the subject lens and then to the lenses in the background.

Since getting my new Canon 50mm f/1.8 I've been playing with depth of field a lot... and I think it is spoiling me >_<

This was a picture taken of me on the same day the roller coaster and i was able to capture better lighting at night and was able to blur out surroundings.

An example of motion and depth of field

comments most welcome

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