View allAll Photos Tagged Depth
Dr. Tatiana Erukhimova (right) sets up a depth charge explosion with liquid nitrogen. Photo by Ryan Carmichael, Texas A&M University
The depth is presented by the strawberries, as the photo is two-dimensional, however the containers for the strawberries is three-dimensional. Used the Apple iPhone 7 camera.
For my exam at nightschool photography we had to hand in some photos around certain aspects of composition. This one is for depth of field.
03AlexMartin01
I really wanted to try some movement shots, so my husband and I went for a run at edgewood park (it's hard to run with my camera backpack...don't worry he carried it half the time)! I wanted to try some of getting the background in focus while he blurs through the photo and some with the lens following him.
This picture was something that I had a hard time with. I had an idea in my head to have the main focus be the screen and have the crowd in the background. I feel that in this picture the screen is the main focus and the sharks logo has nice colors.
I saw this and thought it was comical so I photographed it, it has a sort of gradient of depth of field, the near lawn is kind of clear, and further back the blurriness increases, and the houses in the shadow are even more blurry.
This photograph is of a teddy bear that I own. For this image I really wanted to capture the soft color scheme of the teddy bear while portraying it in a new perspective. I took the image from the bottom of its foot, placing the emphasis here, while allowing the body of the bear to be blurry in the background. I think that it turned out to be pretty interesting looking, almost like the bear is standing on the camera. In addition to new perspective, I wanted to place the foot (the focus) of the bear in the lower right corner to make the composition more interesting. Though the foot of the bear is cut off at the bottom, I feel it does not take away from the photograph because it is balanced at the top by a slight cutting off of its ear. The depth of field is extremely shallow, with the teddy bears foot being the only thing in complete focus.
Nikon D70; Exposure 1/30 sec.; f/4.5; 18mm, ISO-200