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Posts Tagged ‘down’

Getting Down Low in Wildlife Photography

15 Nov

When photographing wildlife, the images that most resonate with the viewer are those that evoke emotion and offer an insight into the world of a particular animal.  There are numerous tips and pieces of advice that can be given to help improve your wildlife photography but the one tip that is the easiest to implement, and will show immediate benefit, is to get down low when taking your wildlife images.

Brown Hare (Lepus europaeus)

Brown Hare (Lepus europaeus)

Here are three reasons to persuade you to try it next time you are out taking photos of wildlife:

1. Getting closer

If you are shooting wild animals, as soon as they become aware of your presence, they will often retreat in the opposite direction.  You typically can’t just walk up to wildlife and expect it to pose for you and getting down low is only part of the good field craft required to get closer to wild animals.  By lying down, you will be far less noticeable than by standing upright or crouching, allowing you to crawl much closer to your subjects before they either become aware of you, or feel threatened.  Often, good field craft is better than the longest telephoto lens for capturing frame-filling shots.

European toad (Bufo bufo)

European toads (Bufo bufo)

2. Isolating your subject

If shooting an animal at ground level from a standing position, you will be looking down on it, meaning that the ground or plants behind it will form the immediate background of the shot.  As this background isn’t very far away, it will be difficult to render it out-of-focus, even with the largest aperture, causing the background to distract the attention of the viewer away form the subject, in the final image.  Getting down low will often result in the background of the shot being much further away, meaning that you can capture the entire subject in sharp focus whilst ensuring that both the foreground and background are soft and blurred, isolating your subject in a fine plane of focus.

Sanderling (Calidris alba)

Sanderling (Calidris alba)

3. Eye level

By getting down low, you can take photos of animals at their eye level.  Typically in wildlife photography, if the face of the animal has been captured, it is key for the eyes to be the point of focus as that is where the eyes of the viewer will immediately be drawn.  If the eyes are soft or out of focus, you will lose the viewers attention, however if the eyes are sharp you create a relationship between the subject and the viewer.  This relationship is made all the more intimate by being down at eye level with the subject as the viewer feels like they are looking at the animal from within its world.  If you take a photograph looking down on an animal, the perspective gives the animal a sense of vulnerability (which can be used creatively in some circumstances) however by getting down low this is easily avoided, and much more powerful portraits an be captured.

You may find that you initially feel awkward crawling around on your front after wildlife and that you get much muddier than if you stay on our feet, but once you start doing it and see the results, you won’t be able to stop.

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

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

Getting Down Low in Wildlife Photography



Digital Photography School

 
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Further Down The River | Zilker Botanical Gardens HD Timelapse Preview

10 Nov

This video is comprised of around 6000 still images taken in June and September of 2010. This stubborn video has been in production since June 2010 and I finally got it all stitched together and looking good. I had a lot of trouble rendering this puppy correctly but I think that I learned enough about the inner workings of the software to counteract my anger about it. Making these time lapses are some of the most enjoyable things we’ve ever done. To sit alone or with your special someone in the garden early in the soft morning light with the company of a still pond and lotus blossoms makes everything feel right in the world. We had this song, Aqueous Transmission, in mind while we planned and captured the time lapse sequences. Just listening to it with your eyes closed makes you feel so peaceful. We wanted to convey that feeling in the video and create a tribute to one of our favourite songs. So as for the video: My computer at home sucks so bad that I wasn’t able to fully preview it. I’m not that happy with the quality in this version but meh, when I finish the whole thing it will be better. 🙂 If anyone has any tips for using Adobe Media Enocoder, I’d be delighted to get some tips.

 
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iFixit tears down the Nikon D600 – Chipworks confirms Sony sensor

08 Nov

MCLmUSsFFytBCjbU.jpeg

iFixit.com has performed a complete tear-down of the Nikon D600, reducing it to its component parts to see how easy it is to repair. Nikon’s latest full-frame DSLR scored a low ‘repairability’ score, of 2 out of 10 since ‘most components almost require a certification in soldering in order to properly remove’. On the plus side, the tripod mount is easy to remove, if you ever cross-thread it accidentally. iFixit has also worked with semiconductor experts Chipworks to take a very close look at the D600’s 24MP CMOS sensor. Click through for more details, images, and a link to both iFixit and Chipworks’ tear-downs. 

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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iFixit Tears down iPad Mini – finds it’s not easy to repair

01 Nov

ipadminiteardown.jpg

No-one takes gadgets apart quite like the guys at iFixit.com and they’ve just got their hands on Apple’s latest tablet, the pint-sized iPad Mini. Basically an iPad 2 in a smaller form factor, the Mini goes on sale tomorrow in the US. Thanks to a whole lot of glue holding the thing together and expensive battery replacement cost, the iPad Mini earns a low repairability score of 2 out of 10 on the iFixit scale. Click through for some sample images from the teardown and a link to the full, gory experience over at ifixit.com.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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3D Music video – Slow Down Molasses “Bodies”

16 Mar

3D help at Bottom of description Watch 2D video here: www.youtube.com Directed by: Andrei Feheregyhazi Song By: Slow Down Molasses Starring:Natalie Feheregyhazi Album available at: slowdownmolasses.bandcamp.com More Andreipedia www.facebook.com andreipedia.com twitter.com andreipedia.tumblr.com ————————- Help with 3D: Get Your Glasses: Canada: NFB has them for free www2.nfb.ca Rest of the world: Just search “3d anaglyph glasses” and you should be able to find a pair anywhere from .30 cents to . I’ve found the blue/yellow yield the best results for me, but haven’t tried the green/Magenta. Although you might be able to find them for free as well. Settings: for Anaglyph viewing I find the Optimised(dubois) setting works best, but play to find your favorite settings. There’s also more advanced options, but if you have the tech to use them I’m sure you know how to get it done. Enjoy and I’ll be happy to answer any questions you have Andrei
Video Rating: 5 / 5

 
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Posted in 3D Videos

 

Getting Down and Dirty

12 Feb

Now we are getting down to the nitty gritty. As I explain in this stereoscopic video, the Bloggie 3D camera is really only good for subjects about 3 to 15 feet away from the camera, but there’s still plenty of options for good depth. BTW, the “Auto Adjust” function in the Stereoscopic Tools in Sony Vegas did not cooperate in this shot. It obviously doesn’t like grass. No problem, since the amount of vertical parallax is so small. And, I have a solution. Stay tuned. 🙂 I left the floating window alone in this one, ie it’s basically the same as the last two videos. Like I’ve said a bazillion times… this ain’t rocket science, peeps. ;/ Plus, I’m having so much fun with Vegas, I’d rather fill up some water balloons than mess around with a floating window right now… LOL. Next week, things might be different… Lots of variables to explore…
Video Rating: 0 / 5

 
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Breaking a Model Down to Get the Shot

10 Jan

One dispute that seems to come up for me, over the years that I’ve been a fashion photographer, is the treatment of the models. Or better still, what to do with a model who isn’t giving you what you need. So here’s the dilemma: you cast a girl who you think fits the look you’re going for on a particular shoot. You organize the team, putting together the best hair stylist, make up artist and stylist for the job. You rent or find the location. You go over and over the details with your team before you even get to the set. You leave no stone unturned: all the details are complete. You’re finally ready to shoot and the girl just won’t emote. You’re playing her iPod, everyone is happy to be there and in a creative mood, food has been offered and eaten. And the girl just won’t give it up! What do you do?

I have a dear friend in the industry who has been doing this as long as I have and he and I have completely opposite viewpoints on this. I won’t say he’s famous for being a “screamer” but he’s one of these photographers that will definitely get angry with the model if she isn’t emoting or giving him what he needs to get the shot. He’s been known to make the models cry or have them walk off set to call their agents. His take is that he’s put all this work in to the shoot to create exactly what he wants and if the model isn’t emoting, the shoot is a waste. I agree with that….it is a waste if the girl just stands there or if the girl is giving you those Model 101 poses. It is totally frustrating and debilitating.

My viewpoint on the subject is this:

If she ain’t got it, she ain’t gonna’ get it. At least not in the 6 hour time frame I need her to be “on”. And maybe because I’m a woman and I’m against berating other women, I just can’t find it in me to be a jerk and start yelling at the model. I feel like the reason why she really can’t emote is because she’s shy or insecure in the first place and screaming at her isn’t going to do anything positive for her already low self esteem. To make the shoot more interesting, I’ll end up moving around the girl myself and shooting at angles that add interest and don’t necessarily need her to emote that strongly. Or, if I have to, I will take her aside and make sure she feels comfortable because maybe someone along the way in production (like the make up artist or the hair stylist) did or said something that upset her so I’ll clear that up so hopefully we can move past it. But when all possible reasons why the girl isn’t emoting have been checked off and she still won’t move, I basically walk away with a shoot that wasn’t all I was expecting. And sometimes I’ll admit, the shoot is a wash. At least in my opinion.

More often than not, if it’s a job, I don’t have the final say on the model choice. And while I can tell the client what’s happening, that the girl isn’t moving or emoting, at the end of the day, the client doesn’t really want to hear it they just want results. I try to keep the set lively and happy and positive and pull out what I can from the girl. I’m fairly good at it at this point. But I don’t scream and yell and reduce the model to tears.

But I know other photographers that do. While I thought I was taking the higher ground by not being a “screamer”, you can see by the short video from our Fashion Photography Exposed DVD when I interview modeling agent James Charles from Photogenics that he doesn’t necessarily agree with me. He thinks that the girls need to be trained and taught that when they are on set with a photographer they need to give that photographer what they’re looking for. So by all means, you gotta’ do what you need to do, to get the shot.

I know that not all of you are working with professional models yet and that the new faces or girls from sites like Model Mayhem can be extra challenging because they too are starting out and may not “know” what emoting even is or how to do it.

So here are some “tricks” you can try to get the new
girls to open up and start emoting for you:

Music

One is to ask them if they want to hear a particular kind of music. Ask them if they brought their own iPod or iPhone with their iTunes on it so they can hear the kind of music they like listening to. Music is a great motivator to get people “moving” and happy. It’s a mood elevator. And I use it often to get everyone to loosen up and start enjoying themselves. After all, this job is really supposed to be fun, right?

Work with People who are Easy Going

Another thing I try to do, and I’m not always in a position to do it, but I try to hire make up, hair and stylists that are relatively easy going and fun to work with. A Diva hair stylist can intimidate a new model like you wouldn’t believe. That won’t help your cause, so try to work with non-Diva-esque people.

Humour

Another trick is humour. Everybody loves to laugh. So try to get the model to laugh. That will help loosen her up. And lastly, SHOW her what you want. Get up there on the cyc or on the seamless and show her where to put her legs or what expression you’d like her to give. If you feel awkward showing her yourself, gather your mood board or have some pictures on hand so you can show her, “This is what I’m looking for, smile (or frown or wink or snarl) like this girl”. Having a reference point will often set them on the right path.

I thought it would be interesting to get your feedback. What do you guys think? Are there any “screamers’ out there that get good results from that? Or do you take the more passive role like myself? What are your thoughts. Let’s keep this age old debate going!! I want to hear from you guys now, how you handle a model who isn’t emoting or moving and let us know some tricks you’ve used in the past that might help other readers get through this dilemma.


Fashion Photography Blog – A Resource for Fashion Photographers, Created by One.

 
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Sunday Morning Coming Down

12 Aug

Es vergeht kaum ein Freitag, an dem ich nicht TGIF (thank god it’s friday) in großen Buchstaben bei Facebook oder sonstwo poste. Wie wohl die meisten liebe ich das Wochenende. Zeit zum Entspannen. Zeit, sein Ding zu machen.

Doch zu einem Wochenende gehört logischerweise auch der Sonntag. Ich kann gar nicht beschreiben warum, aber ich mag Sonntage nicht. Besonders, wenn ich allein bin, der Sommer, wie seit Wochen auf sich warten lässt und irgendwie so eine stille Tristheit über der Stadt liegt. Mich lähmt diese Stimmung immer etwas.

Kriss Kristofferson hat darüber mal einen wunderbaren Song geschrieben, der dieses Gefühl ziemlich genau beschreibt.

On The Sunday Morning Sidewalk,
Wishing, Lord, That I Was Stoned.
‘Cos There’s Something In A Sunday,
Makes A Body Feel Alone.
And There’s Nothin’ Short Of Dyin’,
Half As Lonesome As The Sound,
On The Sleepin’ City Sidewalks:
Sunday Mornin’ Comin’ Down.

Auch letzten Sonntag saß ich wieder bei mir zu Hause und fragte mich: Was machste denn jetzt? Die Hoffnung, dass es warm werden würde, hatte ich aufgegeben. Warm würde mir ja schon reichen, denn eigentlich könnte man ja im August damit rechnen, dass es heiß werden würde, sodass man entspannt am Rheinstrand liegen könnte, um ein wenig Urlaub zu spielen.

So war ich also schon zufrieden, dass es nicht regnete. Ich guckte bei Facebook vorbei und antwortete auf den Post eines befreundeten Fotografen “Wird mal wieder Zeit für eine Herausforderung” mit “Fotografier’ was anderes”.

Und da dachte ich mir: Genau, fotografier doch mal was anderes. Am Freitag vorher war ich abends im Belgischen Viertel unterwegs. Ein Viertel in Köln, in dem eigentlich immer viel los ist. Ein Viertel, in dem sich das Nachtleben teilweise mehr auf der Straße abspielt als in irgendwelchen Bars oder Clubs.

Nicht umsonst steht der Brüsseler Platz mittlerweile als abendlicher Tipp in Touristenführern. Ich dachte mir, da könnte man doch diesen Kontrast zwischen pulsierendem Stadtleben und betäubendem Sonntagsgefühl am besten erleben.

Ich lag richtig mit meiner Vermutung. Als ich so durch die Straßen schlenderte, sah ich die Reste, die das Partyfolk hier und da hatte rumliegen lassen. Die Besucher in den Cafés schauten ziemlich verkatert aus der Wäsche und irgendwie fing ich an, die Stimmung zu genießen.

Diese Ruhe, die mich sonst so betäubt, gab mir die Zeit, genauer hinzusehen und das eine oder andere Motiv zu entdecken, das ich sonst vielleicht übersehen hätte. Und da ich es immer schon interessant fand, im Häaalichen das Schöne zu entdecken, konzentrierte ich mich auf die “schön versifften” Ecken. Am Ende war ich froh, dass ich mich aufgerafft hatte und aus meiner irgendwie doch negativen Grundstimmung etwas Positives zu ziehen.

Um das Ganze hier abzurunden, schließe ich mit einem weiteren Zitat von Kris Kristofferson:

If You Don’t Want To Join The Devil,
You Gotta Beat Him.
I Ain’t Saying I Beat The Devil,
But I Drank His Beer For Nothing
Und Dann Hab Ich Seine Fotos Geklaut… 😉


KWERFELDEIN | Fotografie Magazin

 
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3D Animation “Lift Down” ??? ?? ?????

26 Sep

First Short 3D Animation. Final Project in Bangkok University.

 
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Posted in Animation Videos

 

Down There III

28 Feb

down there III, originally uploaded by ´Amason.is`.

Catchy Colors Photoblog

 
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