View allAll Photos Tagged creativity
An interviewed Portrait I did with the ever so lovely Aisha A.K.A Miss Betty-Sue.
Read more here: (In Dutch) www.twentwatchers.nl/people/2016/03/30/aisha-reehuis-bett...
how I felt too much of the time over the last year.
Happy to say that I feel much better now... the difference was in keeping true to communicating and knowing that the best course through the noise was a life lived in health and balance (not extreme polarity or contrarity).
While on a downtown photo-walk we went into The Cathedral of the Assumption in Louisville Kentucky. I took several shots in this beautiful church and had a blast with the HDRs.
My brother in law (flickr member leppard717) taking a creative shot.
This was an HDR from a single RAW file and processed with HDRefex by nik software.
Creativity + Conflict Resolution: A Leadership Development Workshop with Guila Clara Kessous. At the Boston University Castle. Thursday, April 28, 2016.
Images from this year's creativity summer school. A creative partnership between Thomas Tallis and Kidbrooke Schools and Emergency Exit Arts.
Walrus Talks Creativity event March 12, 2015.
Creativity matters. On March 12, 2015 we partnered with The Walrus to host nine of Canada’s most creative minds, including five Western alumni, for an evening celebrating creativity in all forms. The event was followed by a spirited reception.
Featuring:
Mustafa Ahmed, poet
Cameron Bailey, BA'87, Toronto International Film Festival
Emma Donoghue, LLD'13, author
Joel Faflak, BA'81, MA'91 PhD'99, director of the School for Advanced Studies in the Arts and Humanities, Western University
Juggun Kazim, BA'02, actor, model, television host
Elaine Lui, BA'96, blogger and author of Listen to the Squawking Chicken
Brian Paschke, industrial design lead, BlackBerry
Saukrates, artist and musician
David Usher, singer-songwriter and author
I believe that, it's not the gadget that you have - it's the creativity, the passion and the talent within you that makes that major difference
People who envy, when they see a good shot - they always say that aah that must be from a good camera but then there few guys like Seh , Naj, FiraS to name a few and ETC, who prove that whether its point &shoot or DSLR/SLR - the talent lies within you and how you perceive a scene and how you make a story out of it ... in short if you ask yourself ....
Who made these machines? we the human? who modified it? we the Humans? who are making it better? we the human? so who is talented in here? WE the Human or the MACHINE we created/developed/invented? (here Human is the Photographer and Machine is the Camera)
The guy in this foto - Mr Seh, he is also one such talented fellow. He gets such wonderful shots from that age old camera on his hand which can take 5 photos in a row and then the battery goes flat. He is the technical expert for the Autopot Project which UNDP is going to replicate in Maldives in association with the Ministry of Fisheries and Agriculture.
PS: Anuma is a real exceptional case when it comes to Point & shoot photographs, check out her stream guys www.flickr.com/photos/anuma/ it's incredible to see how she can take such wonderful pictures with a point & shoot
MSc Marketing & Creativity students get a backstage tour of the Paris Opera before being briefed on their consultancy assignment. This is just one of the many fascinating aspects of the programme - find out more by visiting escpeurope.eu/mmk!
Not nearly as complete as Delilah Blue's room. I really like to think that it looks better in person, though ;)
In a bizarre twist of fate, creativity was, at times, actively discouraged during my childhood. I find now, at 38, that I am taking up hobbies that ordinarily people pursue as kids or teens.
This is one of those hobbies, a tiny model that I am painting with a whimsical little pattern. It just needs a topcoat.
Photo was shot with a lensbaby + macro, through the front of a 50mm lens.
This won't win any awards for creativity (see title) but I lit this with one flash, and I never thought I'd be able to get this kind of coverage with just one flash. I've bumped up the exposure and dodged the irises (a bit too much I think) to bring out the colour a bit, and I can't quite get it looking how I like but it's close enough.
This can be one of those shots that isn't really very interesting to anyone except the person that shot it. And sometimes that's good enough.
So, how I lit this in more detail was . . .
. . . an accident actually. I had this idea to shoot the flash through a colander thinking it would give a cool dotted effect, but what it did instead was limit the light hitting my face and bounced the light everywhere else so I was decently lit and had enough light spare to blow out the background. I'm guessing really.
So sorry, this is unbelievably boring to look at but it'll be a helpful reminder to me one day I'm sure on how to get the most of the light from one flash.
Strobist info: SB600 to camera left at 1/2 power with home made diffuser (made out of plastic milk carton) attached and me holding a colander, yes a colander, about 6 inches from the flash.