View allAll Photos Tagged depth

Bangalore, KA, India - May 2008

My Brother-In-Law, my Wife, and Mother-In-Law in various moods captured at the park

 

Exposure: 0.005 sec (1/200)

Aperture: f/4.5

Focal Length: 95 mm

New York Institute of Photography images-Unit 1

The rich dark colour of romance, delicate to the touch, full of the scent of love.

www.idjphotography.com

depth 20 meter, using an Canon Powershot G7 in WP-DC 11 underwater housing

Hi! Here is one of the first pics rendered with TerraRay V5.1 due soon (free update) that will add several post-processing effects like depth of field for example

Getting back into using the camera, messing about with aperture to get exaggerated depth of field shots.

Ashley Castillo

*my photos appear on a different account as well, but these are true original works*

The salar presents some great opportunities to play with depth of field shots

This photo is apart of my three series of photographs where I showcase a long, medium, and short depth of field on the same subject. This photo showcases a short depth of field. This is obvious due to the fact that the subject is in focus in the foreground and the background is completely blurred out. Æ’/5.0

I thought this was a good picture for the depth assignment because I tried to capture the main item (street lamp) along with other things in the background and on the side like the tree branches on the right and the motion of the planes in the back.

Here is another depth of field example, only the focus is now on the ball in the front and not the back one. Honestly I can not even remember how I got my camera to do this but it turned out great.

Portrait

Middle depth of field

The depth of field in this photo is shown by the foreground image being clear and the background becoming progressively blurry. The plant in the front is supposed to resemble new life as the wheel in the background (from 1800s) is an old antique. The ceramic bowl is something that I recently made in a ceramics course as the wheel in the back was also man- made, but during a much older time. Blurring the wheel in the background gives emphasis on how old it is.

leeds international pool opened in 1967 and lasted 40 years. it was going to be called 'leeds olympic pool' but it was built a couple of inches too short to qualify for the olympic standard. after closing the pool (now drained) was opened to the public for a couple of months.

Praktica MTL5B, Pentacon 50mm F1.8, Fuji Superia 100.

 

35mm Scan, no post processing.

Depth of Field testing03

with F4 1/15

Meyer-Optik Görlitz Trioplan 50 2.8

And, imho, perfect for the Depth of field group ;-)

The top left pane is the depth image created by the stereo pair of images on the bottom. The upper right is a fake depth of field image created by blurring everything outside of the depths specified.

Another shot from the St. Louis Zoo inside the Reptile House. I cannot stress enough how much I loved using that 70-200mm f/2.8 lens. I will have one, it might take a little while, but I will have one. :) Please let me know what you all think about this one, as any suggestions are welcomed and appreciated. Enjoy!

OLYMPUS CAMEDIA C-5060 Wide Zoom

 

This was roadside on our way down the mountain. At the time there was no assignment but I thought all of the blooms were beautiful. Having read a bit ahead in the book I practiced some depth of field techniques here. I did a slight dimming of the background colors as well to help the flower really pop. The rest of this flower set turned out well too. f/10.0 1/1600

Eva Velez, friend, writer.

Palma de Mallorca, 2002.

+++

@ Honey Valley - Coorg, Karnataka - INDIA

Uploaded with the Flock Browser

f4.5, 1/640

Love this photo for it's blurred background and vibrant sharp colors in front

For me this is a good example of both depth and movement. While there is the mountain range in the far distance it seems like you could keep walking and never get to it. It also looks like a rolling landscape. #depth

 

Æ’/2.2 ; 1/60

in this photo i thought it seemed a bit interesting

I really like this photo because I capture a close up moment of the squirrel munching on something it found on the ground. It was hard trying to focus as well as moving towards the squirrel but thankfully it stopped for a moment and let me capture a good moment.

Shutter speed:1/640

F-stops:5.6

sooo much bettter :)

this was in november

at a football game.

depth of thought,

This picture shows the depth and field

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