View allAll Photos Tagged Perceptions
Perception is a thing of beauty, what look as an ordinary rope to someone, looks like a interesting motive for a photographer.
"First thing that I noticed was...."
Listen to enhance the image.. www.youtube.com/watch?v=UOYVKgczvvY
Capturing the sunset at Baker Beach with the Dynamic Perception dolly with the Little Bramper
Check out the timelapse video here: vimeo.com/32731309
The light shines more when it is hidden. Seeing it from the shadows, the beauty of light can be seen more intensely. Standing under it, we do not think about its meaning, but when we are not under it, when we see it from afar, we realize just how much we desire it.
Dogwood bark and the dried pith is used by some first nations as a ceremonial smoke in sweat lodges.
from the "My First Diet" series, posted in observance of International No Diet Day. Read about it at:
tiffanygholar.blogspot.com/2009/05/my-first-diet-one-poun...
Hallazgos de la cueva Pom-Arum Pág. 4i. El Nahual de cinco puntas. Domingo Delgado Solórzano.
The transcriptions of Pom-arum's cave
Photo adventure with art model, Rosie Neuharth in 29 Palms, Calif. October 22, 2011.
I can never decide between black and white (my favorite) or color. Feedback please?
When I was working on the original version of this I discovered the world of digital mirroring. I was playing with a photo of windows in an airport and somehow ended up mirroring the photo, and that's where the fun began. I just recently mirrored one of my old drawings and I thought it would be fun to go back to this one (that inspired my latest addiction: digital mirroring) and mirror it again. I'm not sure which one I like better, but this is definitely a nice twist.
Documenting the ins and outs of a movement's struggle is crucial and often neglected. There is a public perception that social movements are filled with annoying, entitled, wild, and pissed-off young people who have no focus or direction. In reality, those who strive for social change are normal human beings. Telling their stories helps humanize their movement and inspire others to act. Isabella and Scovia will do this with photos, videos, podcasts, social media, and radio programs. This will serve activists, organizers, the public, and the international community that wants to stand in solidarity with Ugandans.
What they will do with the money:
$800 will be spent on equipment such as cameras, computer equipment, and hard drives. (Solidarity Uganda will donate a Blue Yeti microphone and - if they can get them back from police - cameras used for the film Our Feet Are Rooted.) $300 is for transportation to meet with various stakeholders throughout the country, including everyday people like school children, peasant farmers, fishermen, businesspeople, etc. who yearn for a systemic change (not only activists). $200 will be used for vegan meals while the work is taking place. $80 will be spent on stationary like notebooks, printed materials, etc. that will be useful while document the stories of New Uganda and the individuals that comprise it. $120 will be spent on internet and airtime needed to communicate.
Why are they qualified to receive a grant, and why does their project qualify for TPP funding?
This project serves the movement called New Uganda to popularize its image and the public of Uganda and international community who will be inspired by it. It helps in the recruitment process as it reveals that New Uganda is not an ordinary political party, NGO, or business. Rather, it is a movement - an idea - that is contagious, decentralized, and accessible to all yearning for change. It will help the world understand the complexities of Uganda. Isabella just completed her degree in mass communications and has enhanced her network while volunteering with The Democratic Alliance. Scovia has similar skills and great administrative capabilities. Projects like Humans of New York, This American Life, and other "human interest" kinds of multimedia projects and programs have proven that a new way of storytelling can cause social change. These experimental forms of building public narrative have been much less tried in the two-thirds world. Uganda is a place of diversity, and its people groups come from ancestors who used oral tradition, dance, drama, etc (the media of their time) to communicate truth to their children and community members. New Uganda wants to build on this tradition by synthesizing it with the most popular media forms in Uganda today: radio and social media.
A beautiful flower? Actually a closeup of a glass of iced green tea with a lime. Shot with reverse-mounted Super-Takumar 50mm.
My blog at whatipic
Advertising Agency: age. comunicações, São Paulo, Brazil
Creative Director: Carlos Domingos
Art Director: Henrique Mattos
Copywriter: Daguito Rodrigues
Published: June 2009
BU Beach
i love this...just on the other side of the ridge is a busy road. The road isn't visible so the road noise actually sounds like waves at the beach.
perception is everything.
La Vision du noir et blanc
Le photographe qui utilise des films en couleurs se concentre sur la lumière mais aussi sur l'arrangement des tons ou couleurs de la photographie.
En photographie noir et blanc, les couleurs étant retranscrites en niveau de gris, la lumière joue un rôle plus important, la vision est par conséquent différente. Les scènes aux luminosités singulières seront plus mises en valeurs que les scènes très colorées.
Voici quelques exemples illustratifs :
des troncs à contre-jour un matin brumeux d'hiver seront plus mis en valeur en noir et blanc qu'en couleur. Il en est de même si les rayons sont perpendiculaires à l'angle de champ du photographe et qu'ils traversent la photographie dans un brouillard épais
un parterre de feuilles d'automne aux multiples couleurs sera en revanche mieux mis en valeur en couleur. L'utilisation d'un film noir et blanc ne rendrait que des tons voisins de gris au tirage.
Toutefois cela n'empêche pas le photographe de prêter attention aux 2 éléments, lumière et couleur, qu'il fasse des photographies en noir et blanc ou couleur. Au contraire, il est important de comprendre comment ces éléments sont respectivement retranscrits selon le type de photographie choisi.
Maîtres du noir et blanc
Robert Doisneau
Henri Cartier-Bresson
Robert Capa
Helmut Newton
Félix Nadar
Lewis Hine
Willy Ronis
Ansel Adams
Robert Frank
Walker Evans
Paul Strand
Richard Avedon
Michael Kenna
Le papillon butine sur les meilleures fleurs, tout comme inakis sélectionne les acteurs de la filière des produits & services écologiques, équitables et éthiques, correspondant à sa charte. inakis vient du nom latin d’un papillon de nos contrées (inachis io, le "paon du jour"). Il symbolise la nature et sa fragilité, et « l’effet papillon » : « les petites causes produisent les grands effets »...