Yesterday afternoon me and my friends set up a still life studio, for photographing commercial style and the ideas was to capturing slow motions, freezing motions by using the objects we brought, also my tutor left some objects for us too use. For example: #eggs, #wine glass, #food colours, #balloons, #bubblegum. ..ect.
I have planned to take some photographs in a busy public place and I decided visitto Kingston station. I wanted also to experiment with different lights, exposures and timing.
*I used long exposure/timings
* Use a small aperture, for example f22
* Experiment with multiple separate exposures
* In some of the photos i change the ISO
.*I used available lights instead of flashes
#Looking through
#juliterr
Road to Oceanside,Ore
#Contactsheets
I set my camera up on a tripod with a wide angle lens. There is vignetting around the edge of the shot as the camera that I used has a full frame sensor and the lens is not compatible with this. I could have cropped this to give me the same size image that I would have got from a cropped sensor camera, however I like the way it looks. It reminds me of an eye, being circular and this fits with the idea of us seeing more than just a single image that a photographs captures.
Étienne Jules Marey, Chronophotograph of a Man Clearing a Hurdle, c.1892.
Étienne Jules Marey, Chronophotograph of a Man Clearing a Hurdle, c.1892.
Three damantiom painting we look at in the class sometime ago. #example
You see through me / Matt Martin
the way he photographed he’s photos.
In this images I experimented with setting up different time and changed the exposure as well.
In this photographs I wanted to capture frozen motions and ast shutter speed in the same way as in my other experiment.
I haven’t show my contact sheets because I edit my photographs dawn to this. I have used three soft box lights. I was the photographe. This photograph is the one I mostly like because everything is in the right place the way she flipped her hair and where it’s been placed.
In the 19th century
•New technologies produce sense of time-space compression (instant communication via the telegraph, for example)
•New ways of measuring time and experiencing vision as a result of railway travel
•Beginnings of globalisation
•Invention of photography and then cinema opens up new ways of “slicing” time.
•'discussion of photography is dominated by the concept of time. Photographs appear as devices for stopping time and preserving fragments of the past, like flies in amber’ -Peter Wollen (in “Fire and Ice”)