RSS
 

Posts Tagged ‘Road’

Blickfang: Falkland Road

22 Mar

Mary Ellen Marks gehört zu den Fotografinnen, die sich mit sozialkritischen Themen unserer Gesellschaft auseinandersetzen. Ihre Fotoreportagen über soziale Randgruppen sind dabei weder reißerisch noch pietätlos. Ihre Sprache ist klar und würdevoll.

Das Bild der jungen Frau im grünen Raum ist still und lässt den Betrachter ohne Hintergrundwissen mit seinen Gedanken erst einmal allein. Die Farben grün und rotbraun harmonieren miteinander und wiederholen sich immer wieder. Das dunkelgrün gestrichene Holz mit seiner abgeblätterten Farbe findet sein Pendant im gemusterten Rock wieder. Die Farbigkeit der Haut wiederholt sich im Überzugsstoff der Matratze.

Mary Ellen Marks - Falkland Road: Prostitutes of Bombay

Hier ist also jemand am Werk, der nicht nur dokumentieren will, sondern auch ein Bild schafft, das anmutig und ästhetisch wirkt. Mary Ellen Marks studierte zunächst Kunst und Kunstgeschichte und entschied sich anschließend, ihren Bachelor in Fotojournalismus zu absolvieren. Im Jahr 1976 wurde sie Mitglied von Magnum, verließ aber 1981 die Agentur, um eigene Projekte anzugehen.

Das beschriebene Bild stammt ursprünglich aus ihrer Arbeit „Falkland Road: Prostitutes of Bombay, 1981“ und trägt den Titel „Twelve-year-old Lata lying in bed“.

In dieser Arbeit dokumentiert die Fotografin das Leben der Prostituierten vier Monate lang, von Oktober 1978 bis Januar 1979. Frauen und Kinder verdienen auf dieser Straße in Bombay ihren Lebensunterhalt und gehören zu den weniger teuren Prostituierten der Stadt. Sie leben und arbeiten in winzigen kastenförmigen Zimmern, die für diese Gegend so typisch sind.

Die Bilder sind farbenfroh und zeigen die Frauen zwischen Hoffnung, Verlust und Melancholie. Mary Ellen Marks schreibt dazu:

Während dieser Zeit lernte ich die Welt einiger Frauen der Falkland Road kennen und durfte in diese Welt eintreten. Es waren ganz besondere Frauen. Dieses Buch ist ihnen gewidmet – mit einem tiefen Dank an meine Freundin Saroja.

Ihre Serie zeigt die Vorsichtigkeit mit der sie das Leben der Menschen dokumentiert. Sie ist Beobachterin und doch auch Regisseurin.

Wer sich einen Überblick über ihre Arbeiten verschaffen und nicht so viel Geld ausgeben möchte, dem empfehle ich aus der Reihe Phaidon 55 „Mary Ellen Marks“ mit einer Auswahl verschiedener Arbeiten und bisher unveröffentlichter Fotografien.

Mary Ellen Marks, 55*
Taschenbuch: 64 Seiten
Verlag: Phaidon Press Ltd
Sprache: Englisch
Größe: 15,7 x 13,8 x 1,1 cm
Preis: zwischen 7 und 40 Euro (modernes Antiquariat)

Und für die Sammler:

FALKLAND ROAD*
Taschenbuch: 112 Seiten
Verlag: Knopf
Sprache: Englisch
Größe: 27,7 x 25,1 x 3,3 cm
Preis: zwischen 50 und 110 Euro (modernes Antiquariat)

* Das ist ein Affiliate-Link zu Amazon. Wenn Ihr darüber etwas bestellt, erhält kwerfeldein eine kleine Provision, Ihr zahlt aber keinen Cent mehr.


kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin | Fotocommunity

 
Comments Off on Blickfang: Falkland Road

Posted in Equipment

 

Winters’ Road to Seeing Finally Shipping

02 Feb

The seemingly mythical Dan Winters: The Road to Seeing is finally, actually in stock and shipping from Amazon. But even now, over a month after release, they are saying it might take an extra 1-2 days to process.

Because Curse of New Dan Winters Book, I guess.

Seriously, this thing disappeared pretty much as soon as it arrived (pre-orders?) and was never planned to be a big press run. So if you want it, you best make hay while the sun shines.


Strobist

 
Comments Off on Winters’ Road to Seeing Finally Shipping

Posted in Photography

 

Dan Winters: Road to Seeing

25 Dec

I am at a loss for a quick way to describe Dan Winters' just-shipped book, Road to Seeing. That's because it defies nearly any category of photo book I have seen to date.

It's nearly 700 pages long, and is far and away the deepest journey into the photographic process I have ever read. It includes technique, but in the context of the journey covered in this book technique is almost an afterthought. And appropriately so.

Best way I can put it: Road to Seeing is not so much a book as it is a mentorship.

Read more »
Strobist

 
Comments Off on Dan Winters: Road to Seeing

Posted in Photography

 

Annual Road Trip and Major Site Revisions

05 Aug

By the time you read this I'll be on vacation with the family. We're taking a road trip north into New England and Canada, where none of us have ever been before. (The above is in Maine, on the way to Prospect Harbor on Saturday night.)

That doesn't mean Strobist is closed. Today we're announcing a completely updated Lighting 101, among other things…

Read more »
Strobist

 
Comments Off on Annual Road Trip and Major Site Revisions

Posted in Photography

 

Road Trip! 19 Remarkable ‘Road’ Images

02 May

Image by Sippanont Samchai

Roads… they’re all around us but I’ve never really considered them to be in my most photogenic subjects list. But maybe I need to rethink that!

Image by Ben Fredericson

Image by fatboyke

Image by Berenice Decados

Image by Paolo Margari

Image by Tambako the Jaguar

Image by ecstaticist

Image by Tricky

Image by Etrusia UK

Image by joiseyshowaa

Image by Pörrö

Image by Bartek Kuzia

Image by Matthew Fang

Image by gari.baldi

Image by eir@si

Image by Shahram Sharif

Image by Martino’s doodles

Image by purplemattfish

Image by MSH*

Share a link to your favorite ‘road’ photo in comments below.

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

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

Road Trip! 19 Remarkable ‘Road’ Images


Digital Photography School

 
Comments Off on Road Trip! 19 Remarkable ‘Road’ Images

Posted in Photography

 

How I Got The Shot: Desert Road

20 Mar
This is the final image I created from a single shot, processed twice.  Taken with the Canon EOS-1D X, EF 24mm f/1.4L II.  Exposure 15 seconds, f/1.4, ISO 800.

This is the final image I created from a single shot, processed twice. Taken with the Canon EOS-1D X, EF 24mm f/1.4L II. Exposure 15 seconds, f/1.4, ISO 800.

Some exposure situations become difficult to handle in-camera without a little post processing later on.  A perfect example is this shot of a desert road in Valley of Fire State Park, Nevada, that I took a week or so ago.  There was no moon, which made it a great night for capturing the stars, but an awful night for capturing the road surface in the foreground.

First, I needed an exposure for the stars.  I started with my usual base exposure for that, 15 seconds, ISO 800, f/1.4.  That gave me exactly what I wanted on the stars, but the foreground was too dark.  I was prepared for this, having brought an LED flashlight with me to “paint” the foreground.  So, during the next 15 second exposure, I held the flashlight on for five seconds, shining it indirectly down the road.  I did not aim it straight at the road, I simply aimed it down the road, allowing the light to skim along the road.  This avoided any hot spots. The 5 second exposure with the flashlight was the result of some experimentation with time. The entire 15 seconds created overexposure on the foreground, so I scaled it back to 5 seconds, and was pretty happy with that.

In the screen shot on the left, I adjusted the white balance to render the sky the way I wanted it- that deep indigo we normally see.  In the shot on the right, I adjusted the white balance so the road looked the way I remembered it.

In the screen shot on the left, I adjusted the white balance to render the sky the way I wanted it- that deep indigo we normally see. To do this, I simply adjusted the color temperature to 3000°K. In the shot on the right, I adjusted the white balance so the road looked the way I remembered it. Again, I used the color temperature setting and adjusted it to 5400°K.

I always shoot RAW when shooting landscapes.  There are several reasons for that, but one of the biggest for me is that I can adjust my white balance for creative purposes in post processing.  As you can see, if I tried to adjust for the sky, correcting that yellow cast that came from the glow of a distant city, the road became a deep blue area.  But if I corrected for the road, the sky became this garish orange.

There are two ways this could have been fixed. The first one could have been done in camera.  By taking a color correction gel, commonly called a CTO gel (Color to Orange), I could have warmed up the light on the road and then as I adjusted the white balance for the sky, the road would have fallen into place.  However, I did not have a CTO gel handy.  So I made the adjustments in Photoshop ACR.

When I adjust the white balance like this, during RAW processing, I tend to avoid the presets such as “Daylight” or “Shadow” or “Tungsten”.  I find I have much finer control by using the color temperature slider, which allows me very fine control over the color tone of the image.  I opened the file in Adobe Camera Raw, and adjusted the white balance for the sky, as shown above on the left, to 3000°K.   Then I opened that image in Photoshop.  I then reopened the image in ACR, and adjusted the white balance again, but this time for the road, as shown above on the right, to 5400°K.  I then duplicated the layer of the properly white balanced road, onto the layer with the properly white balanced sky.  I created a layer mask on the top layer, of the road, and masked out the orange sky, allowing the blue sky to show through.  The distant mountains silhouetted against the sky gave a perfect delineation for the layer mask, making it an easy blend.  After I got the layers the way I wanted them, I simply flattened them, did a few saturation and contrast adjustments, and had my final image.

This image shows the two layers stacked, with the layer mask.  The mask has only partially been painted in.  After adding the layer mask to the layer, you use black or white and paint over the layer.  Black hides the layer, while white reveals the layer.

This image shows the two layers stacked, with the layer mask. The mask has only partially been painted in. After adding the layer mask to the layer, you use black or white and paint over the layer. Black hides the layer, while white reveals the layer.

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

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

How I Got The Shot: Desert Road


Digital Photography School

 
Comments Off on How I Got The Shot: Desert Road

Posted in Photography

 

7 February, 2013 – The Road Less Traveled

07 Feb

Join regular contributor Miles Hecker in reading his February travel essay called A Wise Old Owl – The Road Less Traveled.

         

"Yes I downloaded the videos. THEY ARE AWESOME!!! I learned so much I think my brain is going to explode.

 

Now I need to get the LR4 video to see how much of Lightroom 4 I don’t know". 


The Luminous Landscape – What’s New

 
Comments Off on 7 February, 2013 – The Road Less Traveled

Posted in News

 

2012 Honda Civic Si from WINDING ROAD Magazine

24 Jan

John Snyder narrates as we explore the sound of the new engine in the 2012 Honda Civic Si. Come along for the ride to see and hear the new Si singing in the rain. Enjoy watching our videos? Stay updated on our new video content by subscribing to the Winding Road YouTube Channel. www.windingroad.com https www.facebook.com Music: “Over Under” by Kevin MacLeod www.incompetech.com Licensed under Creative Commons “Attribution 3.0” creativecommons.org incompetech.com
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 
 

WWE 12 – Road to Wrestlemania LEAKED?!?!?! – WWE12

22 Jan

Please Remember to Like this Video. The More Likes the more stuff gets uploaded! In this video you will learn: How to spoil things accidently How to be the phenom How to pose for 5 seconds How to remember flash photography How to be the great white Spawnsored by Evil Controllers www.evilcontrollers.com Join the Respawn Army – Sign up today! http – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – Follow Machinima on Twitter! Machinima twitter.com Inside Gaming twitter.com Machinima Respawn twitter.com Machinima Entertainment, Technology, Culture twitter.com FOR MORE MACHINIMA, GO TO: www.youtube.com FOR MORE GAMEPLAY, GO TO: www.youtube.com FOR MORE SPORTS GAMEPLAY, GO TO: www.youtube.com FOR MORE MMO & RPG GAMEPLAY, GO TO: www.youtube.com FOR MORE TRAILERS, GO TO: www.youtube.com FOR MORE MMO & RPG GAMEPLAY, GO TO: www.youtube.com

 

Iceland Road Trip #2 (FullHD)

01 Jan

Time-lapse video covering our second trip around Iceland. Remember to watch in 1080p quality! Photos from Michal Durinik, Vasilina Krasicenko, Peter Kollar, David Varga Shot with: Nikon D300 Edited: Adobe Lightroom iMovie Music: Of Monster and Man – Little Talks (ofmonstersandmen.is LMFAO – Champagne showers Kavinsky – Nightcall (Drive OST) Created by: David Varga Photos from our travels: www.dvarga.net www.durinik.com Want to come to ICELAND? Definitely book your trip at: www.extremeiceland.is
Video Rating: 5 / 5