View allAll Photos Tagged DepthOfField

Sometimes the dangles take root. I love it.

The Key West Butterfly & Nature Conservatory

Molly Rosner on the train tracks under the BU bridge in Boston, MA June 2012

telephoto setting; low light; accidentally focused on tree trunk instead of wine bottle; two objects only about 3 inches from each other.

I placed the camera at a slight angle and the glasses at an angle towards the sun. I thought it created a nice affect. the shutterspeed was high and I believe the f stop was low

I wanted to get the view of the street in the glasses themselves . and set the shutterspeed low and the f stop high. I like the affect of everything around it slightly blurred while the focus is in the lens.

I was low when taking, almost the same height as the glasses. I was fairly close to them and used a hight f stop and a low shutterspeed.

the glasses were in a shadow but the hill was full of bright light and leaves. I wanted a similar effect from 003 and set my camera to a low f stop and a high shutter speed.

An ant decided to join the photography party. He's running on my running shirt ;-)

A few bikes in the bike-rack at school after a rainy day

Daylilies on parade: front and back.... homegrown cross showing off its "works" - stamens and pistil. Later in the day, we saw a female tiger swallowtail on this bunch.

Same shot taken with all available apertures to study differences between f-stops. (f/7.1)

John Foether and Andrew Spry are practicing their guitars before formal rehearsal at Trinity Presbyterian School on November 15, 2015.

The Gentlest Pitbull the World Has Ever Seen

selective focus.

 

Going for shallow depth of field and highlighting the detail of the plant

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