That is an interesting perspective on darkness, North Star.
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That is an interesting perspective on darkness, North Star.
P.S. I love that staircase photo, as with all your "studies in darkness." I bet all the goth chicks dig you.
http://www.alamedainfo.com/Ponderosa...e_NV_B9825.jpg
[Not a picture taken by me]
That makes one of us. I used to love me some goth chicks fierce. As for my reference, ain't you the guy who posts all them black and white shots featuring shadows, light and darkness? Sure y'are. And don't think I didn't recognize the Ponderosa, you pondweed. :-0
"[S]hadows, light and darkness" - Well, is there anything else? I suppose those dried flowers, sinister, gloomy, cloudy scenes might appeal to a goth chick. Fair enough. There's no denying that my photography is steeped in Romanticism. I tend to forget that not everyone thinks of that stuff as so elemental to photography. Some evidence from the beginning of my serious photography hobby.
https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5537/...b69c3bfc_c.jpg
https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2820/...ae018655_c.jpg
https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3754/...aac48988_c.jpg
https://farm8.staticflickr.com/7009/...f355df2d_c.jpg
https://farm2.staticflickr.com/1551/...248906ee_k.jpgsmith cove, grand cayman cayman islands caribbean sea ocean beach long exposure by Tony Walton, on Flickr
It's been rough recently.
Or perhaps pundering?
Good picture of Smiths Cove. Long Exposure, that must have taken quite a bit of experimenting. Great result.
It occurred to me that if I had taken this photo with my phone, I would probably have deleted it, figuring I didn't hold the camera still enough, but it looks like you did this on purpose and it is rather interesting. How did you get this effect? Just shake the camera?
Without a mobile phone, I still don't understand how only the bottom of the photo was shaken.
Ah, that explains it: thanks, North Star.