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wow, man. just wow.
--Very pleased with this response. I see these photos as painted
with a broad brush- i like that. I've added a .jpg to further
share this wonderful image - I find it has magical qualities- quite
painterly and very much on track with this thread theme of
structure and tonalities.
IMO As much as we are learning to see as photographers- we are
inviting the viewer on a journey of visual experience-we are in a
sense asking the viewer to dance- to see & learn to see along with
ourselves. With implied intent to ideally involve the viewer -to
experience anew by lingering there. This image does it for me.
Stucture can run the gamut of razor sharp outlines or apprear
tenous, with the viewers participation to co-create the structure
being artistic choices.Visual structure like a skeleton provides
- holding the image together in the minds eye. Sharp or soft focus
the bones of an image -here they are very fine bones indeed, almost
invisible- like cobweb ,or a feather's vanes - there, not
obtrusive & intrinsically bound together with a sublte and
dramatic range of tonality.
I find the tonality range of Black, white and golds especially
satisying. One can clearly sense tonality here used in a
painterly way to evoke mood. Your selective editing techique-the
resulting series of aesthetic choices, serves expressive purpose
well IMO. The overtones of winter are there in the light and the
ice on the road, yet the the image remains balanced between warm
& cool associations-in all, a strong, lyrical and delicate image.
Thank you for responding to this thread
NRich
http://www.pbase.com/norman
http://www.pbase.com/norman/dsc_f717_expressions
--Just thought I'd add a couple of my own.
http://www.pbase.com/image/6211077
![]()
http://www.pbase.com/image/6211092
http://www.pbase.com/philipsmith
--As indicated previously, I had (a little) more time today to take
six other pictures, all related to this wonderful theme.
They are all under the title "Frozen Time", in my galleries:
http://www.pbase.com/braudel2001/frozen_time
Hereunder you'll find two of them, if I get it right:
"Still Life"
http://www.pbase.com/image/10720682/medium
and "Ulysses' Return" (Uly, this title was not meant to say that
you should abandon Canon, although of course your 'full time'
return would be most welcome...) ?;-)
http://www.pbase.com/image/10720751/medium
--
Marcel-Etienne
http://www.pbase.com/braudel2001
----As indicated previously, I had (a little) more time today to take
six other pictures, all related to this wonderful theme.
They are all under the title "Frozen Time", in my galleries:
http://www.pbase.com/braudel2001/frozen_time
Hereunder you'll find two of them, if I get it right:
"Still Life"
http://www.pbase.com/image/10720682/medium
and "Ulysses' Return" (Uly, this title was not meant to say that
you should abandon Canon, although of course your 'full time'
return would be most welcome...) ?;-)
http://www.pbase.com/image/10720751/medium
--
Marcel-Etienne
http://www.pbase.com/braudel2001
Bill B
http://www.pbase.com/bill_b
PondriaThis is a great thread. I would like to contribute. I firstIn this thread, I'm suggesting that winter- with or without snow -
provides abundant photo opportunities, including the chance to
focus in on bare bones image structure simular to B +W, and to
consider both subtle and dramatic tonal ranges.
apologize that the photo is not from SONY camera. But the theme is
pretty much in line with what Norman intends. Where I live, we
don't have real Winter with snows. This came close.
![]()
My intent in the thread is to appreciate more of the how's & why tonalities form an underlying substructure of an image, and how winter may reveal a skeletal framework than color is hung on. I don't have subjects specifcally in mind, and imagine them to range beyond expectations, preferably as is the case here, on topic.Then there was my lucky moment of being at the best lookout point
when the sun came out from behind the clouds.
http://www3.photosig.com/viewphoto.php?id=15913
--Thanks, Ann
--
also known as PT Kitty > ^..^
http://www.pbase.com/ptkitty/galleries
http://www.annchaikin.com
Hi Duckboy ...squirel in winter -good shot -charming - spot on exposure.
This is a real beauty - I'd like to have seen it larger -interested to know what adjustments you may have made with this image - the light and tonal range here - quite something - very appealing.
Your the first to introduce statuary images to a winter tonality thread, another avenue to further explore grey tonal scale in winter...imagine there are interesting alcoves of statuary at Princeton. I could imagine these subjects emerging in a series to share........if it is of interest to you.i've also finally discovered statuary and such...i spend so much
time photographing pretty leaves in the summer that i forget that
some cool things don't bother to turn green:
--
This is a real beauty - I'd like to have seen it larger -interested
to know what adjustments you may have made with this image - the
light and tonal range here - quite something - very appealing.
perhaps....although it might take me a while, because i'm deeply afraid of the "been-there-done-that" factor...feel like there are only so many ways to photograph the wheel. but i did like that one....so i might take you up on that one of these days.Your the first to introduce statuary images to a winter tonality
thread, another avenue to further explore grey tonal scale in
winter...imagine there are interesting alcoves of statuary at
Princeton. I could imagine these subjects emerging in a series to
share........if it is of interest to you.
http://www.princeton.edu/~jjameson/galleries/JuniorMaster.htmwould enjoy following your photogrpahy from time to time - if you
were to choose to embed a gallery link........all the best.
As in a native medicine wheel I find it helpfull to consider winter in context of an integrated four season balance of natural cycle - no one season being best, or better than another.I believe winter provides the BEST and most challenging setting for
photography.
"Brown and dreary "- appears to me to be a mind set, an atitude that would otherwise open a broad range of sublte earthtones - not apparent. Winter without snow invites us to explore sensitivity to skeletal structure of tonality. I have found strong dislikes are on the flip side of the best coin, which I avoid as it narrows options in the visual tool box. An Intent to picture the familar is one objective - nurturing ones creativity in winter -with or without snow - is another.It's amazing to me the beauty that snow graces otherwise brown and
dreary landscapes.
I agree - the lack of snow need not be " so uninspiring. " This attitude can pose a creative block, where left unattended. Your a very good photographer - thats unquestioned. With an attitude shift of new appreciation I can imagine what now seemingly appears grey -on closer inspection holds a vast realm of photographic possibilites.And also interesting how the lack of it is so
uninspiring. I guess I should be working on appreciating that side
of winter also.
My instinct tells me that this may be tied into the quandry of the static notion of whats " best. " I have come to think of selection within an organic process, with well realized images as a yard stick. My experience is images of family and friends get bound up with personal attachment, and are difficult to get an overview of, or elaluate for visual realizations.... Interesting post ,and this wonderful image, a fine contribution to this structure & tonalities thread. Thank you for responding..........I'm just not very good at selection)
http://jjj.image.pbase.com/u16/jfuglestad/medium/4897987.Dsc01566gb640x480 .
http://jjj.image.pbase.com/u23/jfuglestad/medium/10694670.Dsc07376640x480 .
http://jjj.image.pbase.com/u16/jfuglestad/medium/4897997.Dsc03756640x480 .
http://jjj.image.pbase.com/u16/jfuglestad/medium/4898055.Dsc08999b2crop1aged2640x480 .
http://jjj.image.pbase.com/u16/jfuglestad/medium/4897996.Dsc03601640x480 .
http://jjj.image.pbase.com/u16/jfuglestad/medium/4898006.Dsc04374640x480 .
http://jjj.image.pbase.com/u16/jfuglestad/medium/4898054.Dsc08999bcrop2640x480 .
Do you consider Winter a downtime, an off season for photography?
This may be a self imposed limitation- a mind set where visual
opportunities lay dormant, and can be reawakened.
Reverse it with a new attitude.....
Winter is the opportunities to focus in on the bare bones of the
skeletel structure of an image. The tonalitiy range- the
transition and weight of tones, form, movement, and rythmn are far
more accessible parred down to basics, more simmular to B+W.
I invite you and others to shoot new images in light of this thread : post and discuss your winter images showing sensitivity to structure and tonalities.IMO winter is the source- the foundation- the discipline, to build
on for the spring. ........ attuned to where color is
coming from and why.
--
Jim Fuglestad
Skill in photography is acquired by practice and not by purchase.
-Percy W. Harris
Our existence is determined by the truths we tell.
Why simply live and let live? Live and help live.
http://www.pbase.com/jfuglestad/galleries
Yes, this is what I am responding to as well.
--
--
Norman,"Brown and dreary "- appears to me to be a mind set, an atitude
that would otherwise open a broad range of sublte earthtones - not
apparent. Winter without snow invites us to explore sensitivity to
skeletal structure of tonality. I have found strong dislikes are on
the flip side of the best coin, which I avoid as it narrows
options in the visual tool box. An Intent to picture the familar
is one objective - nurturing ones creativity in winter -with or
without snow - is another.
the best morsels seem to involve getting under the snow,
remembering where you left them...
![]()
kidding!
but seriously, though...winter IS sorta my off season. i'm still
photographing left and right, but it tends to be of more austere
and moody subjects...which aren't quite as prevalent.
my favorite recent one:
http://www.princeton.edu/~jjameson/uploadimages/shore1
i've also finally discovered statuary and such...i spend so much
time photographing pretty leaves in the summer that i forget that
some cool things don't bother to turn green: