View allAll Photos Tagged windowlight

Hoping your day is filled with love.

 

this is a pin my oldest made for me last year

I was just playing with the OM-D and Oly 45 f1.8. The 45 is a great lens and to top it off it's so small and light. I find that the OM-D focuses really fast and does great in indoor lighting also.

Windowlight as subject rather than source... b & W conversion-- Nikon 55 1.2 non AI iso 800

Do I need to say bigger is better...?

 

Inspired by Moa Maria to make a diptych. Go check her out. You'll find lovely pictures there!

Fougeres - Brittany

Summer 2005

This is our cat Puck. He's very sweet but he sure does live up to his name. He's full of energy and loves to get into trouble. Happy Monday!

I am obsessed with my bedroom... when it's clean.

A bit beyond what 100-speed film could really handle.

My mother put this partial slide into a mount with Scotch Tape (you can see the dust particles stuck to the tape) so she must have liked it. I don't know who the people are, but think it is a Dutch couple who visited her sometime in the Sixties or Seventies. I scanned it because I like the window light and the facial expressions. Even the film edges add to the effect. Looks like it is Kodachrome so the color is quite rich. These organdy curtains were a feature of our homes for many years. They had to be washed and staarched and dried on a rack with little pins that held them. Sometimes, without washing, they were freshened and de-dusted by shaking them in a bag with (I think) salt or flour or a mixture.)

 

IMG_0004

Shot this with my Mamiya RB 67 Pro S and either the 90mm C or 180mm C with 82mm extension tube. Developed at home using Obsidian Aqua 1:500 for 13 minutes.

Inside our SLO office taken with my iPhone.

356/365: There's a series of 6 TV Commercials we started to shoot on Friday. The productions will end next Wednesday so I'll be having a lot of fun capturing the lovely details of gorgeous locations. Yay!

Leica ranfgefinder MP with 50mm Summicron (11826). Ilford XP2. Nikon 9000 scanner.

 

Molly's over a year old now. And we survived.

Lit by windowlight at 45 degrees to the model. Used a very wide aperture for shallow depth of field to blur the hands but keep the pops in focus.

 

With thanks to www.theprettypantry.com/ for providing the pops!

Olympus digital camera

Model: @emiliaprysko

Every morning we sit down and have breakfast together.

 

Potted orchid in the dining room looked good against that wall and windowlit.

I just bought this book on the recommendation from a friend. I'm looking forward to reading it.

 

The author Joe McNally has spent more than 30 years behind the lens working for National Geographic, Time, Life, and Sports Illustrated. He knows all about light and how to control it.

For this photo, I used the lowest f number to blur the foreground (the front curtain) and focus on the subject in the back. I purposely wanted the front curtain to be in the frame and to be blurred to show more depth in the photo. I adjusted my shutter speed settings so that the camera would get most of the light from the window and less from the light in the room. This way the subject's face was more illuminated. I also used the rule of thirds for this composition.

The stairs leading up to my front door get nice light in the evening.

Window reflections in downtown La Crosse, Wisconsin.

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