Looks very interesting and nicely balanced for a camera motion shot. I love the shapes and am both wondering what their source is, as well as how you got the motion so smooth. Excellent work!
Source is lights on a building. Motion is smooth because shutter speed was high and camera and lens inertia dominated the motion. Handheld. Shaken, not stirred,
Aah! This is a fine pin-up for Spongbob Squarepants ! :-)
Actually it earns lots of points for being such a creative subject, and immediately catches the eye. The lighting is well controlled and the choice of background is good too. I think standing the bread on a corner is an excellent choice, as it would be very static stood on a side, and its shadow would be much larger and create a dark base similar to the top, leaving the paler brown as a rather strange stripe in the middle. The out of focus or non-focus-stacked lower corners look a bit odd at first, but since they are relatively small and in unimportant parts of the subject, they dont really detract. In fact they actually blend into the background, which is an interesting side-effect.
You are right, it is worth zooming in and taking the spaceship ride that Roel referred to. Strangely enough the more you zoom in, the more the bread seems to turn to ice!
I like any "macro" image that isn't an insect. (So many macro images on these fora are those of bugs, ugh!) So I like this image.
But I do like it for its own qualities. As is almost always the case in macro-photography, a whole unseen world of texture and detail is revealed. The texture here, indeed is crystalline. Unexpected and fascinating.
This treatment was definitely worth doing and has made something very attractive out of what was probably a very ordinary scene originally. The processing has brought out the chair legs etc in the bottom part of the frame, and they draw us into the picture towards the people in the background, who are almost on a stage against the windows
Well-weathered and well-worn oak timbers in the Oceanside, CA pier in late afternoon sun. Texture and detail galore.
Rich
(Edit: I cannot figure out why the thumbnails and small display images of my uploads show with such a color shift and desaturation. If you click on the thumbnail or small display, the large image appears correct)
(Edit: Solved. Images must be in sRGB space only. This site has problems with Adobe RGB 1998 and ProPhoto RGB)
This is good, but I have to agree with Jim, that it would be improved if the man was doing something more interesting. SimpleJoy's solution was pure joy, but I have another suggestion - remove the man completely. The human interest would still be there by way of the face on the wall, which would actually become more significant without the man. I like the way she stares down the street towards the viewer and I like the irony that the animate object in a rather sterile man-made surrounding, is actually man-made herself.
I like the (leading) lines - on the road, on the right hand wall, on the pavement, on the fencing, the crane, the buildings ... I also like the contrast between the two sides of the road - the neat, tidy slats on the sunny side of the street, and then the organic, chaotic grafitti on the shadowy side of the street.
As Roel has mentioned, sometimes in these shared threads, a theme creates itself. This week seems to be heavy on creative capture strategies and abstract content. Though most of my photos are pretty straightforward, I sometimes dabble in oddities and one of them involves capturing reflections and turning them upside down. Some of you will recognize my swamp or what's left of it,
What an intriguing and non traditional shot! The detail of the front edges is quite clear with every particle visible for a rich texture effect. There is softening in the back of the stack that seems more than a normal fall off in focus, a feature I've run into myself and don't ever know what to do with. It doesn't detract because it seems more artistic photography than graphic representation, particularly with the almost levitating posture your bread- bit has taken. Nice color and background. Thanks for sharing something that makes us look again! And welcome to this long standing tradition that's veered off on a new path and adventure.
It's a very pretty sunset and I've many times had the feeling you must have had: a yearning for a beautiful pull-off with mountains or lake or even a field full of cows to set beneath it. But usually we just have to settle and you made the most of it, with the silhouetted trees and the road bending toward the viewer with a couple of autos full of people who are missing the entire show. The trees give a good contrast and the triangular space right above the disappearing road gives a nice platform for the most dramatic part of the sky. The colors are beautiful. I am not sure if there may be a slight motion blur in the trees on the right side, or if that is an artifact of the small viewable size, but it doesn't really hurt the image. I would clone out the tiny light stick like object lower right.
Yes, we have had some really creative captures and presentations here. I jumped into that theme this week too.
I like it. There's an almost cartoon-ized look to it but not quite. It's pretty graphical with dramatic simplification of the people and the scene to shapes and exaggerated colors that imply what we're looking at but we have to imagine the detail. The scene might have been less interesting with the detail provided for us. I can't begin to figure out how you got here, but I'm curious, especially about the light globes that turn up in unexpected places. The one on the leftmost patron renders him kinda scary but so be it.
We are still learning how to wrangle our project into flat view. We took the step of moving it into a properly designated section but we are not ready to give up on the shared thread concept. Still hoping for threaded view. But it is a work in progress, and we welcome suggestions. The rules of our thread are still just that: rules for the thread, at the top of each week's launch post. Alan used some of our language when setting up the rules for the section as a whole, so they are similar but not exact; they are locked at the top of the section. Individual entries outside the thread are fine, and there are several. They draw their own participants and have a longer shelf life than the weekly thread which starts, runs and ends in a set time frame. Try them both and see what you think?
It is a bit of fun. It has elegance and rhythm like a piece of music transcribed to light. A fine abstract piece of art regardless of how it was done. It's one of those things that would be fitting to matt and frame in one of those all white-and-chrome rooms you see in ads. I like that all the "strings" exit the frame, some on each side. I think that gives balance. The confluence is situated in the general vicinity of the thirds intersection which helps with visual perception. Lovely.
I am curious as to what the light source was and how you controlled its path.