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Bokeh THIS!
Bokeh THIS!
slindenman


Photograph Information Photographer's Comments
Challenge: Bokeh (Advanced Editing IV)
Camera: Nikon D100
Location: Rural North Carolina
Date: Jan 9, 2005
Aperture: f3.5
ISO: 200
Shutter: 1/250
Galleries: Abstract, Still Life
Date Uploaded: Jan 9, 2005

Very little post processing here. Just a little cloning and healing of some imperfections in the wood. One levels adjustment for overall tone.

Statistics
Place: 194 out of 241
Avg (all users): 4.8370
Avg (commenters): 4.7143
Avg (participants): 4.6667
Avg (non-participants): 5.0280
Views since voting: 1107
Views during voting: 401
Votes: 227
Comments: 8
Favorites: 0


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AuthorThread
01/22/2005 04:16:24 AM
Greetings from the Critique Club :)

General Comments:
I think the idea for this photo is excellent and has great potential for future expansion. I do enjoy the limited depth of field and wide angle that elongates the big lens on the camera.

Lighting:
I enjoy the overall soft lighting on the camera. I wonder if a slightly different lighting setup could toss in a little reflection on the lens to add a touch of color in the dark shadow of the lens hood.

Focus/Depth of Field
Looking at the top rated entries (for whatever it's worth) I see a lot of the subjects were seemingly floating on a soft blurry background. I think this idea you have here could be very interesting if adapted slightly to raise the bold black camera and lens off a blury backdrop. The in-focus wood at the very bottom of the photo doesn't really help to (paraphrased) 'enhance the subject by the bokeh of the background', though I do enjoy the wood grain and perspective it gives as it recedes into the background. I would be interested to see this same wide camera angle shot, maybe with the camera suspended by invisible strings, infront of an interestingly blurred background. Maybe expanding the depth of field just a little so more detail on the camera is sharp in contrast to a blurred background would help.

Composition:
I dig this composition and the perspective of the shot. Turning the camera about 30 degrees right or left and using the same wide angle I think would also be a cool perspective.

Color:
Maybe a little more color in the background would really set off the shape of the dark black camera and lense to help seperate it from the background.

Hope to see more of your work here on DPC :)
  Photographer found comment helpful.
 Comments Made During the Challenge
01/16/2005 06:14:22 PM
interesting take on the challenge, especially in that you had to resort to an optical illusion in order to illustrate your equipment ;-) then again, i'm somewhat biased...
01/16/2005 06:12:30 PM
nikon - bite me....
minimal bokeh here ;}

01/13/2005 03:37:20 PM
Doesn't quite do it for me
01/13/2005 09:56:40 AM
What I see is a photo with shallow DOF without taking full advantage of the bokeh effect. You may have been better off showing how your big glass could be used to produce the bokeh effect, rather than showing your big glass.
  Photographer found comment helpful.
01/12/2005 10:54:31 AM
Is that a Sigma 50-500? Man, with an up to 500mm reach you could have produced some great bokeh. The camera looks sooo far away.
01/10/2005 12:48:53 PM
i guess you used your little point and shoot for this one, eh? clever entry, maybe a little lacking on the 'bokeh' as opposed to out-of-focus, though
01/10/2005 03:03:40 AM
You put a Sigma lens on a Nikon dude.


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