View allAll Photos Tagged blurring
Blurs rarely work, and this one didn't either. The head wasn't sharp. However, the image of the flight right before this one had a nice sharp head, but the wings didn't have the effect seen in this frame. All it took was a switcheroo (a term of art) of the head to fix the problem. I tried to diminish the effect of the busy background by desaturating it a bit and removing the brightness from the curved blade in front and under the duck. I normally would have passed on this image, but I'm enamored with the effect of the slow shutter speed (1/200) on the wings. I'll probably hate it by tomorrow.
How to shoot motion blur with your iPhone with panning www.iphone-fotograaf.nl/en/
Shot with my iPhone 6s.
Follow me on Instagram
Visit my iPhone Photography blog www.iphone-fotograaf.nl/en/
Been reading on how to take blurry, out of focus images. Took lots of shots to get the setting and camera movement right to get this effect. Had to crop deep to get the scene closer.
First Snow. One day break thanks to stomach ilness, but feeling better now and finally some snow appeared!
Check my website: photography.marcinbaran.com
To be honest, I straightened my tripod and aligned the camera horizontally with the virtual horizon, using the camera display. Accidentally I triggered the trigger. The result was not good, it was blurred, but not good.
that gave me the idea to blur it really much.
see... that's the result.
Yes, I know about "how cute" and "who can resist?" We had her over a couple of times and she does know us. Even more, she seems to see us as part of her family. In fact, I believe that she regards herself as a "child" belonging to a family of humans. She made it perfectly clear that she has certain expectations in terms of participating in our social life, eating our kind of food - almost asking for equality and fair play. Now my question is, how does evolution work in this case? Did dogs evolve to bond with humans? Did humans develop affinity to dogs? Or, is there a process of mutual co-evolution or even co-assimilation?
Fuji X-E2 plus Mitakon Speedmaster at F0.95.
As hummingbird season was closing this year, I'd begun experimenting with slow shutter speeds. I think I'll pick that up again next summer.
Ruby-throated Hummingbird, young male
iColorama for Blur, Mextures for colors and shadings and textures, Blur FX for color base. This is a tree I photographed a year ago and it has languished in my files since then. Inspired to turn it into a feeling (the buffeting of the weather) instead of just a photograph of a fascinating tree, I played with different apps until I got the effect I wanted.