saltydogstudios
Senior Member
I've liked this video for a while - though I couldn't figure out what inspired them to release this as the music video.
The tiny delay in each of the images is trippy.
But then I realized - Oh she's playing with rolling shutter. She was inspired by the rolling shutter to move a certain way.
Or at least that's what it looks like to me - though the rolling shutter seems to move from the bottom up? Cheap webcam? Mounted upside down? IDK - but she saw this flaw and said - I'm going to use it to create art.
I've long been interested in how the camera is different from the eye. Blown highlights. Shallow depth of field. Perspective distortion. Lens aberrations. Film/digital grain.
All tools in the photographer's toolkit that aren't talked about much, and often as just things to be avoided.
Lately I'm trying to embrace focus itself as a concept to be played with - taking more purposefully out of focus photos. Or at least not being as obsessed with getting perfect focus at the risk of not capturing the moment.
How do you embrace flaws in your photography?
--
"no one should have a camera that can't play Candy Crush Saga."
The tiny delay in each of the images is trippy.
But then I realized - Oh she's playing with rolling shutter. She was inspired by the rolling shutter to move a certain way.
Or at least that's what it looks like to me - though the rolling shutter seems to move from the bottom up? Cheap webcam? Mounted upside down? IDK - but she saw this flaw and said - I'm going to use it to create art.
I've long been interested in how the camera is different from the eye. Blown highlights. Shallow depth of field. Perspective distortion. Lens aberrations. Film/digital grain.
All tools in the photographer's toolkit that aren't talked about much, and often as just things to be avoided.
Lately I'm trying to embrace focus itself as a concept to be played with - taking more purposefully out of focus photos. Or at least not being as obsessed with getting perfect focus at the risk of not capturing the moment.
How do you embrace flaws in your photography?
--
"no one should have a camera that can't play Candy Crush Saga."
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