My faces of
Exit 270 are not exactly street photography – since in many of the photos there
is very little of the street scene involved.
This is why I call it the faces of Exit 270. While many of the subjects in the photos are
not aware they are being photographed –there are some where I have asked for
permission to photograph them, while telling them to try and ignore my
presence. My images are what you would
call “grab shots”, I do try to pick my subjects and carefully compose the
shot. All of the images have been shot
in color and converted to black and white because I feel black and white offers
a more dramatic effect than the same image in color. My camera of choice for this type of shooting is
a Sony Nex7, because it is unobtrusive and gives me the ability to compose and
shoot quickly.
Sunday, June 29, 2014
Tuesday, June 3, 2014
Desert Debris
Debbie Harry once said, “I don’t mind if my skull
ends up on a shelf as long as it’s got my name on it.”
Recently a friend loaned me some animal skulls for
me to work into some still life photographs. I guess he figured my macabre
interest in such items would produce some interesting possibilities. So after studying them for a couple of days I
set about constructing the attached still life scenarios. The lighting used was a portable Flashpoint
Led light, which enabled me to direct the light or paint with it hand held. Using
a Nikon D7000 at ISO100 with an f8 setting, I preceded to create the following
images with some PS help.
Sunday, May 4, 2014
Crayola Village
“Color is my day-long obsession, joy and
torment.” Claude Monet
With respect to art, there was a period
where artists such as Van Gough, Gauguin led by Matisse abandoned the idea of
using color to define objects but let color become the subject of their art. In architecture you do not usually find color
the defining element, however, La Placita Village is a case in point.
La Placita Village is a business complex
downtown that presents the photographer with a multitude of lines, shapes and
angles –it is a group of buildings where the architects were let loose with a
box of 32 Crayola crayons. La Placita is a village where color collides
with design -and color is the subject of this post. The images were all shot using a Sony Nex7
camera incorporated with both a 16mm lens and a fisheye converter for some
images.
Wednesday, April 23, 2014
Dynamic U of A Lines
There is a
thing called “dynamic lines” both in painting and in photography. Diagonal, acute and oblique lines help to
lead the eye toward a central subject or help to frame and break up the image
into various elements. I don’t think
most photographers consciously are aware of these somewhat invisible lines
within their images, but become aware of them in post processing of the
images. I tend to think this is a
subconscious awareness that comes with years of photographing various subjects.
An example of
this can be seen in the images I have shot of the buildings of the University
of Arizona. This is one of my favorite
places to examine architectural subjects. The images do not depict the complete
buildings, but rather the emphasis is on lines and shapes that makeup their
design.
I have
walked through this university many time and each time seen new perspectives
that I didn’t see the first time. With
all landscape or architectural images the time of the day you choose to shoot
will give you a different perspective of the image because of the quality,
quantity and direction of the light falling on your subject. These images were shot with the sun high in
the sky, which tended to flatten out the shapes and open up some of the shadow
areas. The lens being used is a super
wide fisheye lens, which exaggerates the perspective of the architectural
shapes.
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