View allAll Photos Tagged depth

Movement in time. f28 1s

 

Motion to me has a way of adding a new dimension to an image. If captured it creates a sense of flow and movement that I think is beautiful. Taking this photo I tried to capture the flow and feeling you see in dance. Thinking to freeze a motion while allowing it to echo and move on. The room was dim, only being lit by a beautiful hard light from the windows. I chose a shutter speed of 1 second, having my camera set the aperture to 28, allowing a wide depth of field and impression of being present in the moment.

I couldn't decide if I liked this better than the other depth photo. Water is foreground, boats are middle ground, clouds and lights are background

Ile St. Louis

Paris, France

An extended family member aiming down his sight. I wanted my buddy to be the main point. I wanted to show that I was hiding behind a object to look as if I was spying.

S: 1/80

F: 5.6

29th Sept 2010

Today it mostly rained all day. I was going to try to reflect this in my image today, but instead went for this!

f-stop: f6.3

shutter speed: 1/60

 

My last photo shows a combination of depth and shutter speed. The lense is focused on the fountain and farther water spray, blurring out the spray closer to the camera. As for motion, the fountain spurts out a stream of water at a consistent, fast pace; at a shutter speed of 1/60, you can almost feel the flow of water coming out of the fountain.

Kinect depth sensor data

Depth of Field with the flowers in front of my building

Depth of field is shown in this picture

03 Kady Kwan 03 depth

My boyfriend's toy cars collection

This I posted because it was halloween week. This is depth of field because the pumpkin in the front stands out more than the one in the background.

Shutter-1/160

F-stop-10.0

I'm including this one because it was my first attempt at using color enhancement software to modify my image.

 

I actually think I enhanced it a little too much (the original background was light pink) as there is a bit of glare and loss of sharpness in parts, but it does give it a sort of artisitic look.

Rules of Composition

-This photo has a foreground, middle ground and background. It creates a depth of the field and the focus of the objects

 

Why is this a good picture

- It has a center focus of the three different colors, it has a simple background and it follows the rules of the composition.

 

How can this be improved

- The control of brightness on the objects or take this picture from a different angle

This is a picture of my Totoro keychain. This is actually my third Totoro keychain due to me them getting old. I have this because My Neighbor Totoro is one of my favorite Studio Ghibli films and overall one of my favorite films.

This photograph demonstrates the principle of Depth - by using line/shape and the focal point. In this photograph, the main subject (feat. Jack) is in focus, whereas the hallway in the background is blurred, as well as lines/shapes leading towards the door at the end of hallway along with the depth of field, creates a sense of depth.

Looking at some of George's (george_gww) shots, I noticed that when taking "fence" shots, an almost level POV works nicely to blur foreground and background fence. Next time I try this method, I'll try to rotate so that the fence creates a diagonal. Thanks for the idea George!

埼玉県川越市

taken in Kawagoe,Japan

 

MINOLTA TC-1 , FUJI RVP 100

  

...how do you get this picture without great noise reduction and high ISO? Sure I could have had a faster lens (this is f/4), but I'd lose depth of field. I could have selected a slower shutter speed, but traffic was moving...slowly. Basically the most compelling reason for the Mark II is high ISO and superb noise reduction. Sure, this shot is noisy if seen LARGE, but it is good enough and better than none at all.

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