View allAll Photos Tagged Practice
My second proper attempt at star trails. Just a quick one of 60 odd 20S exposures to practice the technique. Taken over my local park while taking the dog for a run : )
Camera was controlled by an open source app on my smartphone and a small device built to link the two together, effectively allowing me to use my phone as an intervolometer.
One afternoon I was waiting for someone and while I was waiting I decided to practice and trying to get a better understanding of the effect of shutter speeds.
I used a rainbow windmill, its three little lights that spin round and round and produce different patterns. I picked this picture because it showed a full circle and all the different colours it produced and the fact that it looks like its going really fast…lol
I did do much in LR…just decreased the blacks and added a little bit of lens vignetting.
All of the pictures are © copyright by P1ay "All rights are
reserved" worldwide. Please do not use, copy or edit any of my photographs. However please feel free to contact with me if you are interested in using any of my images.
"Oh What a tangled web we weave
When first we practice to deceive."
This is a melon skin overcolorized.
Cpl. Clint Price, a dog handler with 2nd Combat Engineer Battalion (CEB), directs Ace II, an improvised explosive device detection dog (IDD), during a training session at Camp Leatherneck, Afghanistan, March 19, 2013. IDD dog handlers, often volunteers from their home units, are matched with a dog and work together to perform route clearance and other duties in a combat environment.
(U.S. Marine Corps photo by Sgt. Tammy K. Hineline)
How to draw the Star Wars logo...
© All rights reserved
Images may not be copied or used in any way without my written permission.
self portrait practice with lighting.
a quick pic before i head out.
thinking of taking part in the 365 project.. hmm...
HAPPY CHINESE LUNAR NEW YEAR! :)
Here's a shot I tried to load last night, but Flickr wasn't cooperating. I was talking with a woman who does face painting, as she was packing up after a long day. I noticed this page of sketches in front of her; she had used it to practice.
The side stories of surfing competition.
Day fourth of Challenger Series, surfers ready to head out on the waves for early morning practices at US Open of Surfing, Surf City Huntington Beach.
My wife took delivery of a new macro lens today and sent me out to play.I first got shots of a Male Holly Blue but it was on the bare ground, taking minerals from Bird faeces, so not an attractive shot. I also managed shots of a Speckled Wood but not great as it was nervous and I'm out of stalking practice. So for a test run, this little Hover Fly on a Marigold.
I found myself so angry this morning while reading people’s excuses for using Ai. So many people stating they use it to do creative tasks because they’re “not ✨talented✨ like the rest of us.”
I stand behind the idea that with most people whose work you appreciate, it’s not a matter of raw talent blessed to them by the gods. It’s WORK. It’s pure drive, effort, stupidity, and the willingness to do things over and over no matter how bad your results may be until slowly they’re not so bad anymore.
I am so tired of seeing Ai and thinking about it, let alone hearing lazy people (and I mean this with as little harshness as I can manage, people are being made lazier by the day by these sorts of things) make excuses why it’s ok for them to not try and to just get a dopamine hit from that social media like/favorite.
I spend so much time practicing in different photography conditions, trying different settings on my camera, & experimenting with techniques. I am not just naturally talented, although I know I have an eye for composition/framing. (Which, again, as evidenced from my film scan of a 1995 sunset & powerlines sky photo I recently posted… I’VE HAD TO PRACTICE AT FOR YEARS.) The same goes for my illustrating, my sewing, my style/fashion projects, my writing, and my small forays into music making.
I am a creative person who tries everything and does their best to hone various skills so I can best combine all facets of my creativity to create multi-media art. Sometimes that means YouTube videos, sometimes that means collage work, and sometimes that means doing styling/hair/makeup, setting up a scene, photographing it, creatively editing it, and making a collage from all of that or illustrating digitally over my images.
None of it is just raw unfiltered natural talent, it’s skill borne by constantly making bad art, taking bad photos, and writing shitty songs or stories.
The entitlement behind these excuses is infuriating. The more I see people lean into instant gratification demands instead of just being new to something and learning, the more I worry about the fate of people’s mental states. I know it’s disheartening to want to “be a great photographer/illustrator/writer” and start in at it and not instantly be applauded for how earth shattering your work is, but know that the people you admire have been putting in the work.
Some mornings I go out to practice night photography and I’m being lazy. I don’t want to take the tripod or use my remote and on those mornings I come back with nothing to share because I took a bunch of blurry grainy photos. Sometimes there is nothing to come of a photo session/walk but a learning experience and I am frustrated but grateful every time.
I took 3x as many shots this morning than you’re seeing here but this is all that came out even semi-acceptable for me because I didn’t want to dig out my remote and the settings I was using meant every little wobble, no matter how imperceptible, caused blurriness.
Please, when you have someone in your life who is destroying the very planet we live on, the only one we have, and lining the pockets of the corrupt ultra wealthy who run these scam Ai sites to “make art,” sit them down and talk to them. Lead them away from it.
Talk openly about your struggles as a creative, show the work that goes into taking your photos that people love. Be transparent and helpful to people who are interested in getting started and please, never ever play it off as just “natural talent.”
Practicing social distancing - the fences at the work site for the new Preston Western Distributor Road linking the M55 to the A 583 at Windy Nook where work continues despite everything. Its on my walk along the preston Guild Wheel
For Purchase please email me at: sbzshah@hotmail.com
Photographer Shahbaz Hussain © All rights reserved
Sketched quickly from the imagination (really just plop down the washes and let it go where it may). I'm using these to practice technique without getting "attached" to the work. I think I'll be doing quite a few of these for a while.
Daniel Smith and Winsor & Newton watercolor in a 9x12" ProArt watercolor sketchbook. Just Ultramarine, and Raw and Burnt Sienna.