View allAll Photos Tagged The_Frame

1. This has very strong and balanced composition because I centering the subject (flower) in the middle of the frame.

2. The subject is definetely seperated from the background because of the contrast of colors (white flower on darker background) and because of the positive depth of field. The subject is in focus on a blurry background.

3. I used only the natural sunlight as my source of light and did not have the flash on.

4. I found it very hard to capture a picture that was in focus in macro mode and with the flash on. I was able to get much better results when using no flash. The subject is much more clear and in focus.

5. I shot this in Rasmussen woods. There were a few of these pretty flowers scattered randomly around in sections by themselves. The flower was upside down so for this photo I actually ended up laying on the trail to get the right angle.

Early morning light on Matillija Poppy

Beyond the Frame showcases the work of Seward Johnson Jr.

This is the second portal sign I made. Details found at apatheticthursday.net/2014/06/07/portal-sign-2/

where possible i have named photos by the rider number - e.g.99forest for rider 99 - if you are wondering how many pics there were taken of you an indicator is the frame number range so if a distant pic is say 00023 and a closer one is 00036 there were at least 14 pics taken

this is fire, i took close up picture to show filling the frame,

Photoessay on president of the photography club for the Harvard Crimson

thought the framing was good.

subject could be too centered tho.

the cut-off fingers.... not sure if that bothers me...

liked the chocolate tag on the frame of his shades, very cool!

. . . and the frame of a third (yellow). Outside the Back Bay Bicycles shop on Mass Ave.

This is an example of filling the frame. I moved close in on the subject and there isn't a lot of wasted space in the photo, the image fills the frame.

some work inspired by uelsmann the frame is a mirror that's why the "wierd square" around the edge of the frame is there the thing in the sky is a cuddlefish that i decided to throw in because in his pic there was a UFO thing in the sky so since i couldn't tell what it was i put my cuddly fishy in.

 

4 pictures to make this one.

North of Rio Grande City/Roma, Texas.

 

On the bike, my focus narrows enough that I begin to discover reality. Thoughts pass alongside cars, emotions spin upon my wheels, and time crawls with the sun.

 

Here, I watched a car pull through the frame and disappear with little more than a kick of dust. It was there, and then it wasn't. For a fleeting moment, that was my life.

 

Weird shit happens on the road. When I'm not coming across roadkill, I'm coming across something even more gruesome: insight.

 

I had as much to say in an early note to myself:

 

"It's when you get off the bike that the shape of life regains old form."

This is a little bit different but he did not want to go in front of his store so he let me photograph him working:)

Tried to do a long exposure of a fire and someone went and stuck their hand in the frame. Oh well, turned out nice anyway.

Crane fly holding the frame together. Natural light

This photo of the Lincoln Memorial had areas of extreme brightness that made the image look almost too over exposed. Particularly the clouds in the image were so bright they were beginning to look too similar in shape. In addition, the image could be made more interesting if the frame size was changed.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

For this image I was focusing on filling the frame. The bookstore that I was in had walls and walls of books already but by filling the frame it really does feel that these books continue on forever. For editing I cropped it a bit as the edges of the bookshelf were peaking in taking away from the forever feel. Then I altered the lighting and brought up the saturation a bit. I also added a filter to which I felt looked nicer than without.

1 2 ••• 69 70 72 74 75 ••• 79 80