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Archive for May, 2013

Spirit: Weekly Photography Challenge

25 May

SpiritYesterday we published a post from Hailey Bartholomew with Tips for Taking Portraits that Reflect the Character and Spirit of Your Subject that gave me the theme of this weeks challenge.

Your challenge is to take and share an image on the theme of ‘Spirit’.

Feel free to approach the theme in any way that you wish – you might want to take a portrait that shows someones true spirit or you could photograph something that is ‘Spiritual’ or even photograph something that represents your spirit.

Be as creative as you’d like!

Once you’ve taken your ‘Spirit’ Photos – choose your best 1-2, upload them to your favourite photo sharing site either share a link to them even better – embed them in the comments using the our new tool to do so.

If you tag your photos on Flickr, Instagram, Twitter or other sites with Tagging tag them as #DPSSPIRIT to help others find them. Linking back to this page might also help others know what you’re doing so that they can share in the fun.

Also – don’t forget to check out some of the great shots posted in last weeks Curves challenge – there were some great shots submitted.

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

Check out our more Photography Tips at Photography Tips for Beginners, Portrait Photography Tips and Wedding Photography Tips.

Spirit: Weekly Photography Challenge


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Sign up for the DPReview newsletter today!

25 May

DPRlogo.png

Just a reminder – you can get a weekly update of all that’s new in the digital photography world by subscribing to the Digital Photography Review Newsletter! As well as updates on what we’ve published, we’ll also be sharing sneak peeks at what we’ve go in the pipeline, as well as a weekly cartoon strip, readers’ polls, jokes, suggestions for photo projects and more. Click through for more details. 

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Vine enthusiast Jethro Ames explains the art of 6-second storytelling

25 May

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Video sharing service Vine has generated a lot of buzz in recent months. Vine allows you to share videos of up to six seconds in length as either a single continuous take or as a ‘collage’ of short duration clips. Art Director Jethro Ames saw Vine as a challenge and decided to push his limits to see what he could do with the app. The result is a series of imaginative timelapse videos that are perfectly executed down to the last detail. Click through to see his work, and our interview on connect.dpreview.com.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Home Is Where The Heart Is: How To Take Portraits In It

24 May

by Lynsey Peterson.

Homephoto1 1

I hate nature. There. I said it. It’s like glitter—it seems like such a fun idea but no matter how careful you are, it gets all over you and 7 showers later you still find it in your hair. This is further complicated by the fact that I live in what is known around the planet as one of the most beautiful places in the world. As a photographer, it’s dreamy situation; I could photograph a family in a parking lot (and I have) and the surroundings are more beautiful than many conventional parks in the world. So most of the time I have to suck it up and schedule an immediate shower after to get the nature off me already.

But every once in a while I have a client request to do a shoot in their home. This is usually because I also live in a place where it’s about 30 degrees outside for a couple months of the year. Even if you don’t ever have snow on the ground where you’re at, beyond just avoiding nature there are lots of good reasons to photograph people in their homes.

People are comfortable in their homes, surrounded by their stuff. They know where the bathroom is and that if there is an emergency drink of water or fruit snack situation, it will be handled quickly and with ease. But photographing in a home, especially if you have never seen it before is usually a bit of a gamble. Lighting, space, simplifying………the fact that they neglected to mention they have a mannequin head collection in their living room……all can create hurdles. Here are some basics that will help you jump those mannequin head hurdles.

Homephoto2 1

Find the Light

In every home, there’s natural light. You need one good window; it can be anywhere and face any direction. Ask to see the whole house, explaining that you aren’t allergic to the inevitable laundry piles that have likely been shoved into the rooms they weren’t planning on you seeing. An entire shoot can take place in a kid’s bedroom, or a kitchen, or even a bathroom (Probably. If it’s a fantastic bathroom. And if it’s that fantastic of a bathroom, by all means you’ll want to see it.)

Often I end up in the master bedroom where there is likely a large window and enough space to work with. Even if you shoot with flash, you’ll need some natural light as it builds the cozy and intimate atmosphere that home shoots are all about.

Homephoto3 1

Incorporate their Stuff

Even more than their home, people love their stuff. And in their home, you’re surrounded by it. Create beautiful interactions with children by being interested in their beloved treasures and asking questions: “What’s this?”, “How does it work?”, “What do you use it for?”, even if it’s obvious. Ask adults what their favorite thing about their home is.

It could be a fantastic piece of art that easily becomes a backdrop. Or that they always pile on the sofa on Friday nights and watch movies together, giving you a setting and vibe. Use their thoughts and make them into personalized ideas for pictures that will be much more meaningful than them running around a random park.

Homephoto4 1

Let them Be

In an outdoor setting, a photographer is often having to create moments or push for situations. By photographing someone in their home, they are already more comfortable than they would have been anywhere else. Use this to your advantage by becoming a spectator and seeing what naturally happens. Because you are the guest in this situation, instead of looking to you for direction, they are much more likely to do things they do normally, giving you an amazing opportunity to document everyday life beautifully.

Homephoto5 1

Creativity: it’s what’s for Breakfast

Because you are likely working with tighter spaces and less options for variety, you’ll have to get creative. The trend of photojournalism in portrait photography lends itself well here. What would they normally be doing if you weren’t there? Ask and work with it. Bake cookies, read books, have a pillow fight. This is what’s going to make your images meaningful portraits and not just snapshots they could have taken themselves.

Homephoto6 1

Don’t Plan It

Much like portrait photography in general, planning shots beforehand is often nothing more than a lesson in frustration. Even if you know who you are photographing very well, you have no idea what direction the pictures will take. Walk in with a plan and you’ll end up on a dirt road with no map and no expectation of having to rough it back. The image below is my son. He is high-strung, full of obnoxious expressive energy, likes things a certain way, and is just like me.

This shot came from an attempt at getting a sweet and traditional portrait in honor of his 3rd birthday. But he wanted to color and ignore me. So we argued about the finer points of photography, and how quick this would be if he would just work with me already, and how people pay me good money for this and he has no idea how lucky he is that I am creating this documentation of his childhood for him to see later. Or maybe he just screamed no at me and went back to coloring. It’s hard to remember the exact conversation, but the point is: I got this shot. Which I love. And sums up my son at that time in his life better than any perfectly constructed and planned image could have.

Homephoto7 1

Head Outside

Just because you aren’t at a beautiful and serene park-like setting, doesn’t mean it isn’t worth changing it up and taking everyone out to the yard for some fresh air. You need a few feet—that’s it. You don’t need snowcapped mountains in the background, you don’t need a gorgeous sunset, you don’t need perfect puffy clouds in a perfectly blue sky (though those are really nice if they are available). And 30 degrees or not, people are usually willing to be outside for a shot or two.

Even if they end up with nature all over them.

Check out more of Lynsey Peterson’s work on her website.

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

Check out our more Photography Tips at Photography Tips for Beginners, Portrait Photography Tips and Wedding Photography Tips.

Home Is Where The Heart Is: How To Take Portraits In It


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World’s Largest LEGO Model: Star Wars X-Wing Starfighter

24 May

[ By Steph in Art & Sculpture & Craft. ]

LEGO Star Wars X-Wing 1

Forty-two times larger than the toy set currently available in stores, this Star Wars X-Wing Starfighter is made of over five million LEGO bricks weighing a whopping 45,000 pounds. Assembled in the LEGO model shop in Kladno, Czech Republic, the model is 43 feet long and 11 feet high with a wing span of 44 feet. It was unveiled in New York City’s Times Square on May 23rd, and will be on display for Memorial Day weekend before reaching its final destination at Legoland in California.

LEGO Star Wars X-Wing 2

The model had to be carefully engineered with a steel framework system in order to withstand all of the travel, breakdown and re-assembly required to transport it across the Atlantic Ocean and from one side of America to the next.

LEGO Star Wars X-Wing 3

It took an international team of designers, builders, engineers, mechanics and logistics experts over a year to devise the plan that brought the massive model from concept sketches to reality. The time it took to construct the model, which is made using the same LEGO bricks sold at retail, was 17,336 hours, or about four months.

LEGO Star Wars X-Wing 4

The model can seat multiple fans in the cockpit for photo opportunities, and its four rear engines light up to a glowing neon red. “We thought it would be a great idea to say ‘What if you took this, scaled it up to the size of what a real X-wing looks like, and here’s the end result,’” LEGO Master Builder Erik Varszegi told MTV Geek.

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[ By Steph in Art & Sculpture & Craft. ]

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Augenschmaus: Schnelles Nusscurry

24 May

Ein Beitrag von: Aileen Wessely

Da wir selbst so gern kochen, backen und schlemmen, unser Food-Genre aber sträflich vernachlässigt haben, gibt es ab sofort unsere neue Serie namens „Augenschmaus“.

Das ist Foodfotografie mit Rezepten, die wir ab sofort jeden Freitag Nachmittag präsentieren – pünktlich zum Nachkochen am Wochenende. Möglich gemacht wird das durch die Zusammenarbeit mit einer Reihe von Foodfotografen und -Bloggern, die Ihr nach und nach an dieser Stelle kennenlernen werdet. Guten Appetit!

© Aileen Wessely

Portionen: Sattmacher für eine Person oder 2-3 Desserts
Zubereitungszeit: 15 – 30 Minuten (je nach Reisart)

Zutaten

75 g Reis
150 ml Wasser
1 Banane
1/2 Handvoll Rosinen
1/2 Handvoll Mandeln
4 EL (Soja-)Joghurt
1 EL Agavendicksaft, Goldsaft oder Honig
1 EL Curry
Prise Salz, Pfeffer

Zubereitung

Den Reis im Wasser aufkochen, dann abgedeckt ausquellen lassen. Währenddessen die Mandeln hacken und die Banane in Scheiben schneiden. Alles vermengen und den Reis hinzugeben, sobald er fertig ist. Zum Schluss noch nach Lust und Laune etwas süßer oder auch pikant abschmecken.

Wer Mandeln oder Rosinen nicht mag, kann ebenso Varianten mit etwa Haselnüssen, Cashewkernen oder Cranberries ausprobieren. Auch gekühlt an heißen Tagen ein mild-exotischer Snack, zum Beispiel zusammen mit einem cremigen Kokos-Ananas-Saft. Oder ein morgens schnell vorbereitetes Mittagessen für’s Büro.

© Aileen Wessely

Fotorezept

Improvisiert in der Euphorie als die Idee zu „Augenschmaus“ entstand, mit Hausmittelchen in einer viel zu engen Küche. Jeweils mit Reflektor von links ganz nah zum Aufhellen und mit offener Blende für ein sahniges Bokeh passend zu cremigem Joghurt und Kokossaft.

~

Du hast auch ein leckeres Rezept und die passenden Food-Fotos dazu, die einem das Wasser im Munde zusammenlaufen lassen? Dann werde einfach selbst Teil von „Augenschmaus“!


kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin

 
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50 Portrait Retouching Tutorials To Take Your Photoshop Skills To A New Level

24 May

21 face-retouching tutorials are at your service! Realistic perfect skin, teeth and eyes heve never been so easy to reach.

The post 50 Portrait Retouching Tutorials To Take Your Photoshop Skills To A New Level appeared first on Photodoto.


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Schiefe Schönheit

24 May

Ein Beitrag von: Jill Auville

Ich habe die meiste Zeit meines Lebens ohne Fotografie verbracht, denn mein Plan war es immer, Malerin zu werden. Als ich noch ein kleines Kind war, malte ich die ganze Zeit, ohne Unterlass. Immer damit beschäftigt, irgendetwas zu kritzeln.

Kreiden, Kugelschreiber, Wasserfarben. Ich zeichnete und malte. Ich war nicht sonderlich gut darin, was vielleicht auch der Grund ist, dass ich heute ganze 115 verschiedene Kamera besitze – und keine Kreiden mehr.

bridge © Jill Auville

Die erste Kamera, die ich mich zu benutzen erinnere, war eine Afga Afgamatic 100, das war vor Ewigkeiten, Mitte der 70er Jahre. Ich war noch ein Kind und ich benutzte sie wie ein Kind. Ich nahm Bilder von Sonnenuntergängen auf, von Pferden. Danach habe ich immer wieder mit der Fotografie gespielt, aber sie hat mich nie wirklich tief interessiert, bis ich mir vor 9 Jahren meine erste DSLR zulegte.

i shadow © Jill Auville

Nach einer Weile allerdings fühlte sich die digitale Fotografie dann doch wieder zu statisch und vorhersehbar für mich an. Also ging ich einige Schritte zurück in der Evolution der Fotografie und begann, mit einer Polaroid 600 zu fotografieren.

Das war ein Jahr bevor Polaroid beschloss, alle ihre Filmfabriken zu schließen, also kam ich ein bisschen spät an im Zeitalter des Sofortbildfilms. Allerdings entdeckte ich zur gleichen Zeit auch meine Freude an der Klein- und Mittelformatfotografie.

Was also habe ich für eine merkwürdige Obsession mit Sofortbildfilm? Er ist für mich der perfekte Hybrid aus Old-School- (ich meine Film generell) und New-School-Fotografie (digital): Du fotografierst mit einem analogen, organischen Filmformat, aber Du bekommst die Ergebnisse sofort zu Gesicht. Für mich ist es exakt die beste Kombination aus beiden Welten.

the ripper © Jill Auville

Unglücklicherweise ist es auch einer der teuersten Wege, Fotografie zu betreiben. Ein einziges Bild Integralfilm aus dem Impossible Projekt kostet Dich 4 Dollar. Wenn Du also nicht gerade eine unendliche Geldquelle hast, musst Du sehr sparsam mit Deinem Material umgehen und nur dann ein Bild machen, wenn Du Dir ganz sicher bist, dass es das richtige ist.

Verschwendung von Bildern kommt aufgrund der Kosten nicht in Frage. Ich versuche nur einen Schuss pro Motiv. Wenn es nicht klappt, dann ist diese Motiv für mich verloren.

Das Tolle daran ist, dass es auch zu meiner Vergangenheit als Kind anknüpft und zur Kunst. Man kann sehr leicht damit experimentieren: Du kannst die Bilder in Flüssigkeiten (Tee, Kaffee, Wein, Sojasauce, die Liste ist endlos) einlegen, um Effekte zu kreieren, Du kannst Emulsionslifts durchführen, Du kannst sogar die Negativseite eines Polaroids in Photoshop invertieren, um ein Bild zum Weiterarbeiten zu bekommen.

Und das alles mit einem Bild. Lustigerweise geht das auch mit schiefgegangenen Motiven. Ich habe rausgefunden, dass schiefgegangene Motive am Ende manchmal sogar besser werden als gute, weil man mit ihnen leichtfertiger experimentiert.

ambush © Jill Auville

Sterile und herkömmliche Fotografie langweilt mich inzwischen ein bisschen. Ich finde keinen Spaß daran. Das ist natürlich eine Sache des persönlichen Geschmacks, ich mache eher „grungigere“ und griffigere Bilder. Ich packe Texturen auf meine Bilder, die ich selbst fotografiert habe (oft sind die Texturen genau die Bilder, die schiefgegangen sind).

Ich fühle mich generell eher zu den schief aussehenden Dingen im Leben hingezogen, auch in den Motiven. Halbverbrannte Bäume, vertrocknete und dornige Disteln, überflutete Flüsse, Krähen. Die Dinge, die die Leute nicht angucken, an denen sie vorbeilaufen. Und mit der Sofortbildfotografie halte ich die übersehenen Dinge für immer fest.

Jill hat ihren Artikel auf Englisch verfasst, unser Redakteur Sebastian hat ihn für Euch auf Deutsch übersetzt.


kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin

 
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Sigma announces availability of 35mm F1.4 DG HSM for Sony and Pentax

24 May

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In a brief note on its Japanese website, Sigma has announced that the Sony and Pentax mount versions of its highly-regarded 35mm F1.4 DG HSM ‘Art’ lens will go on sale on 31st May. It’s also announced that the Nikon-mount version of its 120-300mm F2.8 DG OS HSM ‘Sports’ telephoto zoom will be available at the same time. We gave the 35mm F1.4 our Gold Award when we reviewed it back in December, for its combination of exceptionally good optics and solid build at a price rather lower than the camera manufacturers’ equivalents.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Plattencoverportraits

24 May

Die folgende Serie habe ich in Zusammenarbeit mit einer Freundin gemacht. An einem Nachmittag saßen wir zusammen und sie überlegte, was sie ihrem Freund zum Geburtstag schenken könnte. Ihr kam dann die Idee, dass es irgendetwas mit Schallplatten sein sollte und so überlegten wir uns, was man daraus machen könnte.

Irgendwo in einer der hinteren Schubladen meines Hirns fand ich dann die Erinnerung an Aufnahmen, bei denen Schallplatten vor das Gesicht gehalten wurden. Ich fand diese Fotos immer witzig und konnte meine Freundin davon überzeugen, die Idee gemeinsam umzusetzen.

Dafür überlegten wir uns im Vorfeld, welche Kleidung und Accessoirs wir benötigen würden und wie der Hintergrund jeweils aussehen könnte. Sicherlich ist nicht jedes Foto perfekt gelungen, aber dem Spaß und der Wirkung hat dies keinen Abbruch getan.

Und jetzt will ich unsere Bilder sprechen lassen.

© Normen Gadiel

covershooting-nr14

© Normen Gadiel

© Normen Gadiel

© Normen Gadiel

© Normen Gadiel

© Normen Gadiel

© Normen Gadiel

© Normen Gadiel

© Normen Gadiel

© Normen Gadiel

Merke: Fotografie darf auch einfach mal Spaß machen.


kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin

 
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