Me and my friends setup the university’s studio and each of us took turn to take photographs, each of us had a role to take for example: photographer, director, assistance ...ect.
I framed my model Dafnne and I wanted to capture of frozen motion, by using fast shutter speed.
#movements #depthoffield
Dancing with the feet is one thing; dancing with the heart is another. ~ Unknown - #freezingmoments
1 image
Harold Edgerton (1964) Bullet through Banana, dye transfer print 14 x 18 inches
2 image
Harold Edgerton (1964) .30 Bullet Piercing Apple, dye transfer print 14 x 18 inches
fast shutter speed
For this shoot I had assistance to help me with poring the food colours inside to the wine glass and my other friend help me to mix the water to get that waves that I have in some of my photographs. I experimented with different food colours as well.
#True
It is often a photographer’s goal to portray, imply or represent something within a photograph that can be difficult to show in a still image. This is sometimes telling a story or capturing emotion or atmosphere. I am interested in the idea of capturing movement within a still image.
I like the double exposure.
Nostalgia #12 © Steve Cordingley 2015. All rights reserved.
Facebook / Flickr
Yesterday afternoon me and my friends set up a still life studio, for photographing commercial style and the ideas was to capturing slow motions, freezing motions by using the objects we brought, also my tutor left some objects for us too use. For example: #eggs, #wine glass, #food colours, #balloons, #bubblegum. ..ect.
cool
I didn’t think I could love Edward Muybridge more! And now Mark Rosen and Wendy Marvel took his images and created motorized flip books. There’s a kickstarter campaign so eventually everyone can have their own crank flip book.
In the 19th century
•New technologies produce sense of time-space compression (instant communication via the telegraph, for example)
•New ways of measuring time and experiencing vision as a result of railway travel
•Beginnings of globalisation
•Invention of photography and then cinema opens up new ways of “slicing” time.
•'discussion of photography is dominated by the concept of time. Photographs appear as devices for stopping time and preserving fragments of the past, like flies in amber’ -Peter Wollen (in “Fire and Ice”)