View allAll Photos Tagged depth
The focus on the top and burred out bottom portion of the cone creates depth to imply that it is not a two-demensional object.
I found like the most perfect photo stop. It's a section of the abby, but it's really hidden and beautiful and and fffff! I think one person went past the whole time I was there, and they didn't even notice me!! And Miz looks soooo good in this sort of setting :D
I really like the depth of this one ouo
For my exam at nightschool photography we had to hand in some photos around certain aspects of composition. This one is for depth.
USS Thomas, DE-102. Undated photo in possession of one of the crew (my father). Also appears on NavSource: www.navsource.org/archives/06/102.htm,
Reverse has notes in my father's handwriting:
"We were trying out a new type of depth charge. This one detonated prematurely - practically on the surface."
Date unknown--seems likely it was summer or fall of 1945, which is when my father served on the Thomas in the Atlantic.
(Service record of this ship records maneuvers in Long Island Sound and Block Island Sound in May/June 1945. That fits in with my father's service on the ship, so I think I have the date pretty close. Also, the seascape is calm, but no shore visible, consistent with a large, but protected body of water such as those sounds.)
This photo was laminated with a dimpled texture, and I have done some processing to remove most of that pattern.
shutter speed: .6 seconds
F-stop 18
ISO: 100
Here I have widened my depth of field by choosing a smaller aperture.
I have also slowed my shutter speed to let in more light (.6 sec compared to 1/13 seconds).
In this photo, you can see that the background gnome is sharper than it is in photo01
A man only becomes wise when he begins to calculate the approximate depth of his ignorance. - Gian Carlo Menotti
Depth of field - depth of ignorance? Ignorance is shallow. Sometimes you have to see what's in front and beyond you in sharp focus.
Attended the Digital Days workshop in Los Angeles this past weekend. Model shots and portraiture are not my forte, but it was a fun if not hasty shoot. Putting up a few of my favorite shots over the next few days.
Since this is certainly not my genre, I welcome your comments or critiques more than usual.
I chose this photograph because it illustrates narrow depth of field. Only the Canada Dry bottle is sharp. It was at 7 feet from the camera.
The shutter speed was 1/1000 of a second. Aperture was f2.8. I used a 50 mm lens.
A representative soil profile of Truce fine sandy loam. This soil is underlain by shale at a depth of about 110 centimeters. (Soil Survey of Jack County, Texas; by Wilfred E. Crenwelge, Natural Resources Conservation Service)
The Truce series consists of soils that are deep over claystone bedrock. These well drained, slowly permeable soils formed in loamy colluvium and/or slope alluvium over clayey residuum derived from claystone of Pennsylvanian age. These soils are on gently sloping to steep, convex ridges. Slopes are typically 1 to 5 percent, but range from 1 to 40 percent. Mean annual precipitation is about 813 mm (32 in) and the mean annual air temperature is about 18.3 degrees C (65 degrees F).
TAXONOMIC CLASS: Fine, mixed, active, thermic Udic Paleustalfs
Soil Moisture: Udic-ustic soil moisture regime
Depth to densic bedrock: 102 to 152 cm (40 to 60 in)
Surface Fragments: 0 to 20 percent; cobbles and stones of ironstone and sandstone.
Particle-size control section (weighted average)
Clay content: 35 to 55 percent
USE AND VEGETATION: Mostly used as rangeland. A few small areas are cropped to small grains and sorghums. Climax vegetation is an open post oak savannah with tall and mid grasses such as indiangrass, big and little bluestem, and sideoats grama. Most areas contain other woody plants such as blackjack oak and elm with invading mesquite, cedar, and lotebush. Present herbaceous vegetation consists mainly of sideoats grama, Texas needlegrass, hairy grama, threeawns, sand dropseed, and other low producing perennials and annuals with western ragweed, Engelmann-daisy, bundleflower, prairie clover, primrose, and gayfeather.
DISTRIBUTION AND EXTENT: Texas North Central Prairies (MLRA 80B) and West Cross Timbers of Texas. The series is extensive.
For additional information about the survey area, visit:
www.nrcs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_MANUSCRIPTS/texas/TX237/0/...
For a detailed soil description, visit:
soilseries.sc.egov.usda.gov/OSD_Docs/T/TRUCE.html
For acreage and geographic distribution, visit:
I broke off the normal trail, hiked up the hill in hopes I could get a shot the others couldn't. I wanted to get a shot of with the lake below me and the mountains in the distance. What I didn't realize was the Depths the photo had from the trees close in to the slight outline of the distant mountains.