Can you give us your point of view?
Every week I will propose a new challenge, it is a topic that you will have to capture in photo and upload it to the Facebook page of the blog by putting in the description the keyword that I will indicate for each topic. Topics range from portraits to macrophotography, landscapes, black-and-white photography, or babies. On Fridays topics will be offered, so you have the whole weekend to work. You’ll have one week to upload your photo (one photo per participant), until Thursday of the following week. On Thursday I will update the article with the photo that most captivated me and on Friday I propose a new theme so that you have all weekend to capture your images, etc.
- If you think that to take photos you have to leave the house.
- You are wrong.
- The most everyday objects and the nearest views can surprise you.
- Today I challenge you to practice shooting from your own window.
- Your house.
- Your job or your neighbor’s?) Find the window that offers you the best or most interesting views and show us what you see.
You can, for example, play with perspective, because it’s a good time to shoot from above, with lines, or show us the lives of your neighbors (and I already give you a lot of clues ??). something interesting to tell us, so since what runs through your veins is pure art, you can show it in a beautiful way, that is, in the form of a great photograph Do you dare?Of course, I didn’t expect less from you!?
As usual, to participate in this week’s challenge, take your photo to the Facebook wall of the Photographer’s Blog: In the photo description, please mention the keyword?Challenge from my window? Followed by a title of your choice.
Those of you who are not from Facebook have the following social networks to participate in.
Good picture
Thank you, thank you and thank you for your massive participation. With so many photos, it’s hard to restrict your selection!By the way, what different scenes can be viewed from a window!I wanted to move into some of their houses?
This week I want to highlight the photograph “Obsessive compulsive nightmare” by Mario Alberto. This image is distinguished by its excellent composition. You could even shoot with a cell phone, whatever, the composition speaks for itself. The perspective that gives the height of a window was of great help in this case and Mario knew how to take advantage of it, because from another angle we could hardly have played with the lines of the passage and the pedestrian, now the decision to place the diagonals is what gives him that force, the one that energizes the scene and the one that brings tension. These lines draw the gaze directly to the pedestrian, the center of interest, clearly defined both by the lines and by being the only human element in the scene. The author also hit the target perfectly, filling the frame, although he left this small piece of asphalt that contrasts and breaks the rhythm. The pedestrian was also positioned outside the center, following the three-thirds rule, which in this case works very well. And, in addition, the black and white (perfectly processed) emphasizes the scene much more, since the lines are generally favored by the gray scale. As if all that were not enough, which is, and to spare, the image also has another reading: a story marked by its title, an obsessive-compulsive nightmare. Bravo Mario, a magnificent composition!