View allAll Photos Tagged Movement
Explore #2. Glad everyone like this one cause I plan on hooking up with more of Hawaii's highways and city streets :)
Isn't the world a better place where there are no ugly orange street lights and everything looks of blue steel and white chrome with crisp lines and vibrant colors... well, at least I think so. If you would like your world to look like this then vote Yes to The Blue Movement. Sorry, I have no idea what I'm talking about and now I'm just rambling. Here's more stars and stripes to feast your eyes on. I think I like how this one turned out much more than the last one. Anyhow, I'm off to work. Hope you all have a great Blue Monday.
Saturate your eyes with Blue...
Dropped the temp all the way down in ACR. Manually blended 6 exposures. Added tag to the street sign. Added curves, contrast, saturation, and unsharp mask.
You are the rite of movement
Its reasonin' made lucid and cool
I know it's no improvement
When you move, I move
You're less Polunin leapin'
Or Fred Astaire in sequins
Honey, you, you're Atlas in his sleepin'
And when you move, I'm moved
"In this movement of colors I find the essence,
which does not arise from a system, or an a priori theory."
- Robert Delaunay
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Thanks to all for 14,000.000+ views and kind comments ... !
Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission.
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Finding a single rock with the sea sweeping around it is like photographic heaven for me! with the use of a lee little stopper it gives you the opportunity to be creative and capture the movement just how you want to show it. Here's one taken at Hengistbury Head in Dorset last week.
Have a great Friday guys!
As the engraved part claims, there are no jewels in this watch's movement. It is made of metal.
This photo is a composite of 5 separate stacked photos.
“Light in Nature creates the movement of colors.”
Robert Delaunay
I’ve been a little busy lately, but posted a couple from the archives. Have a great day, my friends!
my backup dslr (a nikon d90) died this week ... during the lunar eclipse, of course. this left me with two film bodies (both nikons,) and while this is not a horribly bleak situation, i like shooting digital. so the death of the d90 was a little stressful. i'm also in the midst of packing up and selling off my little recording studio, so i'm waiting to get that all behind me before thinking seriously about where my little corner of the photography world should go next. in the meantime, i have purchased a used nikon d7100, and this is the first shot from the 'new' camera, a jpeg taken straight from the camera and cropped. i think i kinda like it.
littletinperson
this one moves even further away from reality & solid worldly things.....it's the land of fumes & light....in & out of conciseness.....of sleep .....the land of dreams & visions that always disappear when awoken
thanks for looking in.....appreciated.......best bigger......hope you have a Great Weekend
To perform kinetic photography is satisfying for me on many levels, and not just artistically. I have always believed in the philosophy of anthropomorphism, and so I believe that the "spirit," if you will, of the machinery, in this case my camera, is a co-conspirator with me to enable me to produce these interesting works of art.
I also believe in the phenomena of automatic drawing and automatic painting, and to me this type of photography has elements of both. Also, to perform kinetic photography in the manner in which I do, is for me a little akin to the old practice of suspending a can of paint above a canvas by a rope, poking small holes at irregular intervals in the can's bottom, and then giving it a gentle push to set it into a random swinging motion and continuing until you and the can of paint have together "made" a piece of art. I find similar elements in the process of my work: Just as with the can of paint swinging randomly over the canvas, one has a general idea of what might be produced, and must have a reasonable control over the technique and know when to stop.
The longer you look, the more you'll see, and feel, especially if you view these at their largest size in a darkened room and sit back about six feet or so from your computer monitor.
Thanks for looking. I hope you enjoy!
See more kinetic photography in my set, "Flux Velocity:"
www.flickr.com/photos/motorpsiclist/sets/72157622224677487/
Please view large...there are some interesting details off in the shadows.
This addition to the series in my set, "Flux Velocity," is a kinetic photograph like all of those in the set, which means that I throw, tumble end-over-end, spin, whirl, and otherwise throw my camera up into the air, endangering its well-being, in order to obtain these artistic shots.
This is another in the series of shooting over my desktop. I hold the camera above my desk, spin and drop it, and must catch it before it crashes into all of the breakable stuff I have on my desk! Risky but fun! And the results are definitely worth it.
For those of you who follow my stream and / or have read the introduction to the set, "Flux Velocity," you will know that I finally failed to catch my camera and dropped it onto concrete, splitting it open (One of the risks you take to obtain these photos.). Save those broken cameras if they still work, which mine does: I now use it almost exclusively for kinetic photography and since it's damaged I've become willing to take even greater risks with it.
You may read more about the technique I use in the introduction to the Flux Velocity set:
www.flickr.com/photos/motorpsiclist/sets/72157622224677487/
NOTE: If you will view these at their largest size and sit back about 6 feet from your monitor, especially if the room is darkened, they will exhibit a nice 3-dimensional quality.
I hope you enjoy viewing these...I had fun making them for you.
"Capturing and creating movement in a still photo is a challenge for every photographer. Use movement this week to tell a story."
Model: Liz
If you hadn't noticed, I've developed a love for anything with movement in it.
-jumps
-hair flips
-dancing
-kicks
-wind catching objects
-throwing things up
yup that's basically my whole stream. haha
And here we have Liz, a very experienced ballerina, and a beach. I just had to :P
Of course, this was very much inspired by a photo by brookeshaden, who is a master of movement :)
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