View allAll Photos Tagged ds215
Topic: Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject.
The key word here is for me a SUBJECT. Not the lines themselves.
It's been a tough one. I wanted Lumpy the Heffalump to look out of the tunnel window, as if through a window, into the sun. At the same time, it was meant for the tunnel to be still lit inside by some "ambient" light, but the entrance to the tunnel was blocked by the camera and the lens. Lighting it from the camera directly would cause the first part of the tunnel much brighter than the middle. I did not want that. The ambient light was supposed to be much more even throughout the tunnel. Here goes...
...The Strobist info: "window" light coming from SB800 zoomed to 105mm, manual power 1/64th power, camera right into a reflector (closet doors). Fill light provided by SB900, zoomed to 24mm, manual power 1/64th power, below camera, facing it, into a reflector (a white pillow) toward the scene.
Practice photography at Daily Shoot. Learn to light at Strobist.
2010 - Day 169. June 18, 2010.
Daily Shoot - Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject.
I didn't know how to expose for this shot. The hostas are in almost total shade in my garden, but there was a stream of light casting a wonderful glow through the upper part of the leaf. I switched to spot metering, tried to expose for the snail and used my flash. The end result was that nothing was exposed properly. Even after a couple of tries I couldn't get it right, and by then I'd lost my subject; it's surprising how fast snails can be ;-). In post processing I decided to go with the underexposed subject. I bumped up the blacks, as well as the highlights, creating contrast. I added a bit of definition with my fractalius plugin to counteract the slight shadow from the flash and give a clean silhouette. I still don't know how to expose for this situation, but I wanted to rescue the shot because I do like the composition, lines and mood.
Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject. #ds215
Edge of the window box at my Mom's house. Headed home today and hoping for the best.
Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject.
In minutes, the sky will be total dark! Amazing! The storms of yesterday left the sky so flluffy, cotton-candy colored!
Friday's Photochallenge:
Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject. #ds215
@dailyshoot: 2010/06/18: Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject. #ds215
Not much success with today's assignment; I liked the intersection of shadows more than the lines, but I'll aim wildly. The subject has just went down the steps at the end of the deck. Who was it?
#ds215: "Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject." www.dailyshoot.com/assignments/215
Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject.
PS: This is dedicated to you timh! I love your overexposed photos a lot.
This is a regular brown umbrella, shot straight with the flash at 1/4 power, zoomed at 24mm. Then on postprocessing I 'helped' a little bit more by raising brightess and lowering shadows and blacks.
It's not converted to black and white though.
#ds215 Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject.
New ceiling fan going up. Bigger to fit the size of the room and a little more contemporary. We are definitely eclectic! :-)
@dailyshoot #ds215.
Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject.
Other Daily Shoot images for Assignment #ds215
file ref: _MG_3429captives.jpg
Looks better @ B l a c k M a g i c
#ds215
Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject.
A spoon full of sugar beet molasses.
Maybe not really on the spot assignment wise, but I like it.
I had a nice motiv where some dry twigs pointed to the half moon, but it turned out unsharp...
"#ds217 Make a photo that creates depth. Draw the viewer in by choosing an interesting foreground, middle-ground, and background."
This is an area I'm obviously far from mastering. The idea that high DOF gave pictures with good depth occupied my head while I was out shooting, when I came home I found out that that wasn't the case at all. Almost all of the pictures would have benefited from a lower DOF and a well placed focus. Lesson learned.
This shot would have worked better for #ds215, leading lines.
The Daily Shoot assignment for 2010/06/18:
Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject.
Daily Shoot: Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject.
Luckily, you can always push your bike uphill.
"Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject."
I realized with this assignment that I see leading lines in photos after they're taken. Not in photos as I'm taking them. I will definitely return to this - it was a real challenge to find something that wasn't obvious. So obvious it is, but I have a new thing to work on!
Squash growing in our community garden 6/18/10
Assignment: Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject.
Daily Shoot: Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject.
Casselman's station no longer really functions as a station, but the building has been preserved. Its main focus now is as a tourist office. So may old stations have been demolished.
The Daily Shoot #ds215 - Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject.
My old Macbook's wireless card has gone kaput. This is my "temporary" solution.
Thank you to Dragon Studio dragonphotostudio.com, featuring models Rosa Silvey & Jessica Magary, for your time inside & outside the Chesapeake Conference Center for helping promote showbride.com’s Winter Engagement Bridal Expo at the Hampton Roads Convention Center. Also thank you to Creatiff Beauty Designs LLC creatiff-beauty-designs-llc.business.site, Tiffany Chanel & Company tiffanychanelandco.com, Queens Bridal & Things queens-bridal-things.business.site, Graceful Designs tanyasgracefuldesigns.com, Stebos Limos steboslimos.com and Hampton Roads Convention Center/SAVOR thehrcc.com #HRCC #TiffanyChanelandCo #HamptonRoadsConventionCenter #DragonStudio #QueensBridal #CreatiffBeautyDesigns #GracefulDesigns #StebosLimos #SAVOR #WinterEngagementBridal Expo #showbride
DailyShoot: Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject.
The Daily Shoot assignment for 2010/06/18:
Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject.
Today’s Daily Shoot assignment is:
Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject.
Before the sun came over the trees to hit the sand, these beach morning glories reminded us to 'line up' for the new day! 4th Ave N & Gulf of Mexico, Naples, FL
"#ds215 Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject."
A quick last minute photo, can't say I'm happy with it. Forced myself to spend little time on this one, need to need to spend more time sleeping right now.
Lighting: sb600 into softbox camera left, flashlight behind subject.
Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject.
#ds215 Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject.
Today's Daily Shoot assignment: Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject.
"Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject."
“The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious. It is the source of all true art and science.”
“The true mystery of the world is the visible, not the invisible.”
folds of fabric, paths of pollen
#ds215: Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject.
2010/06/18: Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject. #ds215
I was considering this one for the previous task as well.
The Daily Shoot #215: Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject.
The Daily Shoot assignment for 2010/06/18:
Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject.
blogged: the aunt with gum
* hello adventure *
There are train tracks across the street from our shop and there are so many spots along the way that they seem to go into an abyss of foliage... as if they'd disappear into the trees like the baseball players in Field of Dreams.
daily shoot:
Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject
Canon EOS 50D
Taken: June 18, 2010, 1:52:35PM
Aperture: F/3.5
Shutter Speed: 1/1600 sec
Focal Length: 10mm
ISO: 100
Lens: 10-22mm/3.5
Edited in Paint Shop Pro Photo X2
dailyshoot
#ds215 Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject.
#ds215 Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject.
Pointless more? 1/500 sec at f 5.6 / ISO200 - 50mm. EF50mm f/1.8 II.
Your viewer’s eye will tend to follow a line. Make a photo that uses leading lines to direct the viewer to your subject.