|
Post by Sepiana on Oct 12, 2020 5:32:08 GMT
Hi everyone, Would you like to participate in the Weekly Photo Challenge? Just take a photo that is your interpretation of the theme and post it in this thread. - Your photo(s) should be your own, i.e., they should not have been taken by someone else. - Photoshopping is allowed but should be kept to the basics only rather than a total transformation. - Grab your camera, experiment, and, most of all, have fun. NOTE This week's theme was suggested by tonyw. (Thanks,Tony!) This is what this theme is all about in his own words.
|
|
pontiac1940
CE Members
Posts: 6,360
Open to constructive criticism of photos: Yes
|
Post by pontiac1940 on Oct 12, 2020 19:07:47 GMT
Thanks: good topic. Light is so important. Was dull and raining around noon and the sun "sort of" shone for a few minutes and light beams hit a few random leaves. Think the BW version displays the concept of "light" better than color.
|
|
pontiac1940
CE Members
Posts: 6,360
Open to constructive criticism of photos: Yes
|
Post by pontiac1940 on Oct 13, 2020 2:57:28 GMT
Take 2.0 A lighting experiment. This glowing apple (a small Gala) was shot in almost complete darkness ... a smidgeon of light was coming from Quilting Central in the next room. The apple is lighted from behind (actually, below) by a small LED flashlight (torch). The method is a tad weird. The apple is perched atop a vertical empty paper towel tube that is on top of a short step stool. A flashlight is inside the tube pointing upward. The apple radiates more light along the periphery because there is less tissue to penetrate. F11, 5 seconds at ISO 1,600.
|
|
|
Post by hmca on Oct 13, 2020 15:13:17 GMT
Very creative interpretation of this week's theme! Thanks for including how you achieved your results.
|
|
|
Post by kdcintx on Oct 13, 2020 21:10:39 GMT
Yes, thanks for explaining how you took the apple photo. The bright colors of the apple are enhanced by the contrast with the black background.
|
|
|
Post by tonyw on Oct 13, 2020 22:56:22 GMT
Was in Stratford Ontario this morning and saw this scene while driving by and just had to find a parking spot and get out the camera. As a kid I was always told never to take a picture directly into the sun but I break that rule quite often these days - in this case the sun was just out of frame and conveniently mostly hidden by leaves but shining through enough to create patterns of light on the fallen leaves. I was just in time as a city parks person was just out of frame driving a big machine sucking up the leaves - they'd just finished that green strip you can see on the right of the picture. When I drove past later in the day those fallen leaves had gone for compost! Tony
|
|
pontiac1940
CE Members
Posts: 6,360
Open to constructive criticism of photos: Yes
|
Post by pontiac1940 on Oct 13, 2020 23:05:02 GMT
Tony, I am envious. We get smatterings of fall colors but nothing like the hardwood forests and parks in the East. Nice Clive
|
|
|
Post by blackmutt on Oct 13, 2020 23:53:40 GMT
Clive and Tony, love both of your photos. I need to find some time to play. Thanks for the inspiration
|
|
pontiac1940
CE Members
Posts: 6,360
Open to constructive criticism of photos: Yes
|
Post by pontiac1940 on Oct 14, 2020 2:25:04 GMT
Thanks Judy. Photography is all about light and really little else...without light we have nothing else. A challenge like this helps us remember the role of light and hopefully show off some cool aspects of light and lighting. I can't post it in this challenge (it's old) but one my fave "light" photos is of a power pole. Yup, just a pole bathed in warm light with gunmetal-blue dark clouds behind it. Clive
|
|
billz
Senior Forum Member
Posts: 827
|
Post by billz on Oct 14, 2020 2:49:08 GMT
Here's a gas station and the lights lighting it. Thanks for the theme Sepiana and Tony!
|
|
billz
Senior Forum Member
Posts: 827
|
Post by billz on Oct 14, 2020 23:16:40 GMT
Thinking about the effect of light and shadow prompted me to put an egg on the counter last night and recreate an exercise from lighting 101, moving a constant light and studying the shadows as they changed on and around the egg. It was a good refresher. For the theme I put my lightbox in a north-facing window, with a white reflector to the south. Although the shadows on and around the eggs all changed as I rotated the eggs, the still photos weren't very egg-citing (sorry) until I added a couple chickens. Thanks again for the inspiring theme ... it's what I love so much about these challenges.
|
|
|
Post by hmca on Oct 14, 2020 23:50:50 GMT
So before I went to bed last night, I saw Bill's gas station. It gave me the idea to use a night light.
|
|
|
Post by hmca on Oct 15, 2020 22:43:56 GMT
Noticed the afternoon sun casting shadows on the wall. I set up a few items to capture their shadows/silhouettes....converted to B/W.
|
|
|
Post by blackmutt on Oct 16, 2020 1:39:29 GMT
Nice "seeing" Helen!
|
|
pontiac1940
CE Members
Posts: 6,360
Open to constructive criticism of photos: Yes
|
Post by pontiac1940 on Oct 16, 2020 2:05:27 GMT
Nice Helen. billz so do you live inside a pyramid in which gravity exists in a matrix being high in spots and low in other zones? I am looking at the rear-most egg that is defying gravity or about to fly away...or merely standing on a mini tee. Clive
|
|