View allAll Photos Tagged depth

light(:

short depth of feild

photography project, long depth of field!

Area of former coal-fired power station Hagenwerder/ Görlitz

Exposure23_Fstop16_Shutter20

 

This photo was taken with an f-stop at 16 and a shutter speed 20.

Depth because you can see deep into the background.

The brick underpass behind the Library.

This photo is a good example of depth of field because the lock is the only object in focus.

 

Shot at El Dorado Recreation Park, South Lake Tahoe

03 R. Graymond 04 depth

 

This one, unlike one above, was purely by accident. I did want to shoot the bird in the water, yet the gull who was a camera hog all the time I was there, needed to be in every shot! 300mm @ f/16

DEPTH: The distance in proportion to an object to create engrossment of and space within the picture's environment.

I liked the misty look the narrow depth of field gave this lavender photo.

Aperture: f/5.6, ISO Speed: 3200, no flash

i love the focus on the part where the spider silk lingered around.

Mary's Garden, Plymouth, MN. July 22nd, 2007. Canon AE-1 Program, Kodak Portra VC 400.

f/22, 1/30, Focal Length: 28mm

 

I chose to emulate the example in the module lecture, as I'm not terribly creative and thought it would be easier this way. Boy, was I wrong! I had a lot of difficulty not so much with aperture or shutter speed, but distance was a pain in my butt. It seemed akward to have the objects so far away from each other, and I wish I had changed things up a bit. Oh well, too late now. The three "depth of field" images I posted were the best of the bunch.

 

03Miramontes06 Depth

03Doug04 depth:Taken from the ground up of a sculpture of spinning wheels, with an ISO of 100 on zoom later put in Photoshop for light balance and adjustment to bring out the colors of in the rotating wheels.

Processed with VSCO with t1 preset

J-3

Piper

Dandelion

Airplane

Yellow

Vintage

Cub

This image shows depth similarity; this time, it is the subway tracks, yellow safety line, brick tiles and ceiling pipes that converge at the end of the subway line.

When lining up some shots at Six Penny, I decided to point my camera at some reeds to test the exposure. I shot the photo from my hip and never expected to actually keep it, but it turned out to be quite interesting and strangely centered. The photo below is 100% raw data. The image was only opened in the GIMP to re-size it to 1280×1024.

1 2 ••• 74 75 76 77 79