Dag, II is the more interesting. Perhaps a colorized black-hole? Spinning camera w/slow shutter? (Sky, clouds and de-chlorophylled leaf?) Mystery is a component of many a terrific image.
Jack --- DagT <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Den 8. nov. 2005 kl. 15.13 skrev [EMAIL PROTECTED]: > > > <snip> > > > So, just go out and play and try it yourself. It is never too dark > > > to take > > pictures without a tripod, it is only too dark to make the sharp > .-) > > > > DagT > > ============== > > It reminds me of the sort of things that Freeman Patterson > > (Photography & The > > Art of Seeing) recommends doing to free up one's visual perception > > > and loosen > > one's approach to photography. Also similar to Drawing on The Right > > > Side of > > the Brain by Betty Edwards -- drawing upside down to free up one's > > > approach and > > see composition in a new way. (Which makes me wonder if Ansel > > Adams, using > > LF, was always composing upside down.) > > > > Despite reading the Patterson book, I've never tried jiggling. > > Based on how > > nice your Autumn is, one of these days I should. > > > > Marnie aka Doe > > You should try it, it can be fun (yes, I read Franks comments .-) > > Here are two more examples, though not as good as the first. > Just shaking: > http://foto.no/cgi-bin/bildekritikk/vis_bilde.cgi?id=203407 > > Natural twirl, which means twist, tilt and zoom at the same time with > > LX and A24-50: > http://foto.no/cgi-bin/bildekritikk/vis_bilde.cgi?id=202915 > (by the way, this is a self portrait .-) > > > DagT > > __________________________________ Yahoo! Mail - PC Magazine Editors' Choice 2005 http://mail.yahoo.com

