View allAll Photos Tagged depth
This is a great example of depth because it caught the branches just right as they were swinging in the breeze.
I picked this picture for depth of field because the flowers are in focus, but the foliage is not in focus.
I like this one, it looks very cute. Adding depth really brings live to the picture. It looks like this one little guy in the front is even closer to us than it really was, I did not move the other ones in the back so much further from the one in the front as they look in this picture. The sutther speed was 1/30 and the f-stop 1.9.
I shot this at F22 (the smallest aperture on my lens) in order to maximize my depth of field. I chose this image because I took it at the vista point at Rancho San Antonio on a hike the past weekend.
(UPDATED 8/5/16): I chose this photo for a couple reasons. Firstly, this is one of my favorite depth of field shots. Secondly, it was able to provoke a thought of concern in my concern album. In fact, it created irony: a lone soda can facing the looming "No Dumping" sign. Even though there's no Rule of Thirds, the "No Dumping" sign is clear in detail and in center, making this the subject in attention. Sparking irony as a theme is one of the best things I like about this photo and is a good motivator as to why I chose this photo in the Final Project.
Irony, eh? A "No Dumping" sign stands triumphantly while the lone soda can stands defiantly in front of it, as if rebelling in a very serious tone. I chose this photo because I want the viewer to feel as if the sign is a demanding presence and warning to the soda can as a litter or "dump". Thus, the sign being clear while the can blurry just to give it the main attention. SS is 1/250 and F-Stop is F/4.5
I chose this because the focus is on the object in the middle and the things behind it is blurred out.
The trees spread out and the trailing of bushes leading into the forest make for natural depth in the photo.
I took this picture from inside a coffee shop in San Francisco. I loved the humoristic effect that the juxtaposition of these 2 signs created. When I took the picture, the focus was going all the way from the foreground to the background and I knew that this picture, like all my pictures, will go through PhotoShop (PhotoShop, magical word!) The only difference between Background, middle ground and foreground was the over exposure of the middle ground. I color corrected the sign that was pinkish and gave it a whiter colder look. I also gave more body to the middle ground by darkening with the "level" tool and added a small but visible "radial blur" to guide the viewer from the foreground to the background. I masked the "RITE AID" sign to protect it from the radial blur and emphasized the contrast to revive the red color to emphasize the "danger" or unhealthiness of the situation and/or message.
This tree was a mass of blossom. I think the narrow depth of field and blue sky background make this individual cluster of flowers stand out a little better.
I discovered that taking photos of bikers is challenging! This shot was my best attempt at blurring the background slightly to show movement and getting a decent composition.