Let's change our perspective and see where TEN's Chapter 3 leads us! S-
Chapter 1Chapter 2What To Do Next:
- Read the third lesson Change My Perspective By Changing Yours
- Carry out the Creative Exercise at the bottom of the lesson
- Select one of your images to post and discuss the questions
- This should be informal and interactive. So talk, talk, talk!
- Ill give a go ahead when were ready to move to the next lesson
- But feel free to cheat and read ahead if you want!
St3v3M wrote:
Let's change our perspective and see where TEN's Chapter 3 leads us! S-
Chapter 1Chapter 2What To Do Next:
- Read the third lesson Change My Perspective By Changing Yours
- Carry out the Creative Exercise at the bottom of the lesson
- Select one of your images to post and discuss the questions
- This should be informal and interactive. So talk, talk, talk!
- Ill give a go ahead when were ready to move to the next lesson
- But feel free to cheat and read ahead if you want!
Let's change our perspective and see where TEN's C... (
show quote)
I'll have to say this one was my favorite so far because I like looking for different perspectives to try anyway, and this chapter just made me more aware of doing it deliberately, and taking some crazy shots I wouldn't normally try then experimenting with processing.
For this one I crawled underneath an angel trumpet vine at Bellingrath gardens, stuck the camera all the way inside, and took some shots. The first shot is one of several of the bell shaped flower, the second is the Interior View From Below. Certainly different! Looking for the lines and shapes from the different angles was a good exercise too.
I may have to post more as this thread progresses, 'cause it was a fun one.
There weren't 20 possibilities here, particularly since I wasn't willing to lie on the sidewalk - lol, but I tried to find an angle of the mural that might be a bit uncommon.
minniev wrote:
...For this one I crawled underneath an angel trumpet vine at Bellingrath gardens, stuck the camera all the way inside, and took some shots...
Any chance there is a selfie being posted too? :)
Love #2, Minnie. Super perspective!
Linda From Maine wrote:
..
Ultrawide? Interesting angle to show off the bright colors, and the lines as well.
You should try lying on the sidewalk. Even if you don't get good pictures of the subject, you can get some great shots of the people staring at you & trying to figure out what you're doing.
Linda From Maine wrote:
Any chance there is a selfie being posted too? :)
Love #2, Minnie. Super perspective!
NO - but I fear my cousin did sketch it, as she did much of what we saw together over our 3 day adventure - flowers, landscapes, birds and people. I haven't seen the sketchbook yet but am looking forward to it.
It was interesting to me how the lighting changed, too. The first one was driven by the greenhouse lighting. The second had that light altered and diffused by the flower itself.
minniev wrote:
Ultrawide? Interesting angle to show off the bright colors, and the lines as well.
You should try lying on the sidewalk. Even if you don't get good pictures of the subject, you can get some great shots of the people staring at you & trying to figure out what you're doing.
LOL - OK, next time I'll do it :)
Yes, 10-18 mm on APS-C camera. Thanks, Minnie!
minniev wrote:
I'll have to say this one was my favorite so far because I like looking for different perspectives to try anyway, and this chapter just made me more aware of doing it deliberately, and taking some crazy shots I wouldn't normally try then experimenting with processing.
For this one I crawled underneath an angel trumpet vine at Bellingrath gardens, stuck the camera all the way inside, and took some shots. The first shot is one of several of the bell shaped flower, the second is the Interior View From Below. Certainly different! Looking for the lines and shapes from the different angles was a good exercise too.
I may have to post more as this thread progresses, 'cause it was a fun one.
I'll have to say this one was my favorite so far b... (
show quote)
I very much like the "interior" view.
Shot about 2 weeks ago (had read ahead).
Had a few hours to kill in a regional cemetary so shot a couple of sequences. Always used the same lens (80-300 FOV in 35mm terms) and different focal lenghts (mostly to frame the subject) and apertures. Pelling bark can make for some good subjects. Proably shot 15 images and kept 4 for the bark pics.
RichardTaylor wrote:
...Pelling bark can make for some good subjects...
This is a beauty, Richard!
Uuglypher wrote:
Back to basics?
Dave
I 'll say. Good examples.
St3v3M wrote:
Let's change our perspective and see where TEN's Chapter 3 leads us!!
A commonly recommended perspective re: things with faces....
RickH
Loc: Toronto, Canada
Here goes. For this assignment I returned to a building -- a 1950s designed court house -- that Ive shot before. The building fascinates me, but I have yet to produce an image that satisfies. For the assignment, I first shot it straight on, the panoply of small windows framed by two trees and a bench. Then, for a different perspective on the rectangular windows, I shot very close to the building's face and to the side. I'll be curious as to what everyone makes of this. (I also experimented with other perspectives and angles, but none really worked as well as these.)
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