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Showing posts from December, 2017
Tips for Shooting Great Portraits
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https://blog.phowd.com/2014/09/7-tips-shooting-great-portrait-photographs/ This article talks about how professional photographer should be able to take portraits no matter what. It also talks about how you have to be comfortable with you model and tell them exactly what you want them to do for the pictures to turn out the way you want them to. I learned that it's okay to break the rules of composition to make visually pleasing images. a a.) I picked this picture because the models gaze really pulled me in and got me interested. b.) This follows the rules of balance and simplicity. c.) Yuri Acurs took the photo
Old Spiral Staircases
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https://petapixel.com/2014/12/19/disorienting-beauty-spiral-staircases-old-abandoned-buildings/ This photographer is based in Germany and loves to shoot old abandoned buildings. He grew up surrounded by unadorned buildings and he began to fall in love with shooting them. I learned that shooting from different angles and perspectives can give you interesting results. stairs a.) I picked this picture because the lines were interesting and the faded blue against the orange color making it pop. b.) Balance and line are two obvious examples of rules of composition. c.) Christian Richter
The Oldest Living Thins
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http://www.rachelsussman.com/oltw/ The photographer talk about how she likes to take pictures of things from the past, right now in the present. She likes to treat her subjects as individuals she's taking a portrait of. I learned that photography can go hand and hand with science. Atlantic Moss a.)I really like this picture because the color scheme is calming and visually pleasing. b.) This follows the composition rule of balance and rules of thirds with the points of the mountains. c.) Rachel Susan took these photos.
What Makes a Killer Time Lapse
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https://blog.ted.com/how-to-create-a-killer-timelapse-with-joe-capra/ On this website I watched a time lapse video taken in Rio and I read about how the photographer became interested in time lapses.The article is set up as a Q and A, with the interviewer asking questions and the photographer answering them.Time Lapses take hours to shoot, and only last for minutes or seconds, as the photographer explains that shooting the night sky would take al night. a.) I watched a video that was a series of clips of time-lapses of different places and perspectives in Rio de Janeiro. b.) Joe Capra created this. c.)Time Lapses are composed of hundreds or thousands of pictures taken over a period of time. Joe's camera work also has incredibly high-resolution, almost too much for a computer to handle. d.) I learned that it takes really long amounts of time to create a time lapse