View allAll Photos Tagged motion
Back and forth, splish splash, perpetual motion, from long before me, and continuing long after I am gone along with my human worries.
Dusk at a lake I pass on a weekly basis, finally after years I found a little time to stop.
Great Falls National Park in Potomac, Maryland
www.redbubble.com/people/thadz/works/15993504-trees-in-mo...
500px.com/photo/119395875/Trees-in-motion-by-Thaddeus-Zaj...
Experimenting with lower shutter speed and catching the cars speed. NO EDITING was done in terms of bluring the background, but the colors are obviously done, as I find it most appealing.
Just experimenting; from like 100 of photos that I have taken from this city bus, I've found only this one that I like.
Cheers.
The motion of the Fox River after a heavy rainfall at the Barstow Bridge in Waukesha, WI.
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My bride and I pretty much always put a hummingbird feeder out at camp site when we set up. It's pretty amazing how fast the little critters will often find it, sometimes the day we set up. This little female (rufous, I believe) found it the morning after I set up and hung around all 4 days I was at Gold Lake in Plumas County California.
I shot this frame messing around a bit with the electronic shutter on my newest camera which is a mirrorless body. Shooting fast moving stuff with the electronic shutter doesn't always work because of a phenomenon known as "rolling shutter." Basically, the camera is actually capturing multiple frames simultaneously. It does this by capturing one line at a time from top to bottom of the sensor very quickly, but not quite as quickly as the actual exposure time (in this case 1/800 of a second). Therefore, unlike the normal mechanical shutter that opens pretty much all at once, exposes all at once, and closes, movement happens as different parts of the frame are exposed. This is fine for stationary subjects but generally undesirable for fast moving subjects and can result in some really freaky distortion (I got a couple frames where the bird turned and it looked like a wing was detached from the body). However, in the case of a bird on the wing while straight at the camera it can result in some interesting motion blur like I think happened here.
Going for layering, From the sunrise to the bridge, the truck & headlights to the light posts the reflection in the side of the car, the mirror and the words written on it and then the sign posts and motion of the freeway in the foreground.
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Certainement pas le coucher de soleil de l'année ... néanmoins, le mouvement créé par la mer et les vagues entre les rochers était, je trouve, assez esthétique.
Photo prise sur la côte Ploemeuroise proche du Courégant.
On other day, I was thinking how to do motion in a photo without actually moving anything on it. I'm quite sure whether this is the one I was after, but it's close enough for now.
I know the poses might be bit off here and there, but you'll get the big picture. I may continue study this in the future, just because I've found this very interesting subject to work with!
www.youtube.com/watch?v=dx7vNdAb5e4&list=RDdx7vNdAb5e...
Lyrics;
"Growin' up you don't see the writing on the wall
Passin' by, movin' straight ahead you knew it all
But maybe sometime if you feel the pain,
You'll find you're all alone everything has changed
Play the game you know you can't quit until it's won
Soldier of only you can do what must be done
You know, in some ways you're a lot like me
You're just a prisoner, and you're tryin' to break free
I can see a new horizon underneath the blazing sky
I'll be where the eagle's flying higher and higher
Gonna be your man in motion
All I need is a pair of wheels
Take me where the future's lying St. Elmo's fire"