View allAll Photos Tagged depth
Posts.
LFM Visit to Oxford FM to see their "Made in Oxford" exhibition. And well worth a gander it is.
These leaves were being held to the fence by a winter wind from the west. I took this photo to demonstrate a narrow depth of focus. View Large On Black
This is a good example of movement because Gianni and the ball are clearly in movement while the background is left without movement
This shows depth and movement, I took a wide-angle shot of the ocean and the waves crashing on the shore.I can almost see them moving now.
Here I took advantage of the depth of field that was created with two similar looking tennis balls. I also realized last second that the balls are in order, Penn 1 and then Penn 2.
The roof lights of the corn exchange reflected in a part-drunk single espresso...
I'd tricked the camera into focussing on the pin-point lights... but the coffee was still moving, leading to the loops of light, rather than points...
Pool table. The design principle is emphasis with the 8 ball being the focal point.
Canon EOS Digital Rebel XS
Lens 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 IS
ISO 1600
f/4.5
1/10
auto white balance
Only adjustments were to eliminate imperfections in the felt
Depth of field test: f/11 focus on inifinty
Fair Park, Dallas, Texas. Shot with a Canon 40D and a vintage Vivitar 135mm f/2.8 preset T mount lens.
Daily Habit. April 25, 2012. Playing with depth of field in the extreme with a lensbaby. Lots of glitter glue on my face.
The morning of San Francisco, I used shallow depth of field to make my friend Gina stands out from the busy crowd.
Strobist info:
Canon 580EX II thru 60x60 Softbox camera left @ 1/32
YN-560 thru 40" Shoot-thru Umbrella camera right @ 1/32
YN-465 with widepanel back left & back right pointing at the background @ 1/4
Triggered via RF-602
In this fotograph I capted the motion of a flying bee. You can see the movent of the wings while the bee was freezing in the air. I use a faster shutter to capt the action (1/2000) and also I thin that you can see the bee motion better because it was flying towards me. Even though my intencion was to capture movement, it is also a good example of depth because you can see how the immages of the bee and the flowers in the foreground are sharp while the flowers and the background are more bleur or fozy.
Thought this was a dream composition, bike with the leaves behind it, foot traffic along the sidewalk preferably in shallow depth-of-field, somehow managed to screw it up, got the bike out of focus instead getting that red garbage can in full focus... *sigh* The story of my weekend and also the hazards of trying to play with shallow depth-of-field
Here you can see the water fountain and movement of the water. I was very excited about this picture. #depth
ƒ/2.2 ; 1/1130
While walking to the camera shop, I got inspired by this brigde.. I need to take a photo of it and this was the result :D
Gear:
Canon EOS 50D
Sigma 17-70mm OS HSM
Horse Jumping, ƒ/5.3 at 1/4000. I like this photo a lot because it freezes the movement of both the rider and the horse at the moment when they jumped over the fence. It tells you how focused they are and also their trust to each other.