Today’s challenge is to capture small subjects, that are real or that make them look with your camera, do you like the challenge?
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.
- There are things or small beings.
- Such as an ant or a grain of rice.
- And also large things that.
- By distance or in relation to others.
- May seem tiny.
- With your camera you have this power.
- You can do something very great That is what we ask them to do this week.
- That you use that power.
- Whether you turn large or small objects into smaller or even smaller objects.
No matter how you do it, whether you do it in color or black and white, or if you use a forced perspective, what matters is that you get a good photo, with an interesting composition and that makes us say Wooow!And most of all, practice!
As usual, to enter this week’s challenge, upload your photo to the Photographer’s Blog Facebook wall: In the photo description, please mention the keyword? What Little Challenge!? followed by a title of your choice.
Those of you who are not from Facebook have the following social networks to participate in.
Twitter: upload the photo directly to Twitter with the hashtag ‘TouchTouch-oBdF’
Good picture
Follow some interesting photos you sent us this week, here’s a summary you’re sure to like.
And the highlight of this week is “Dramatic Pause” by José Francisco López Rodríguez. I chose this photo among the others for several reasons. The first is that it looks like a perfectly executed photograph to me in terms of focus, composition, and black and white processing. The diagonal that crosses the image gives it strength and divides the photo into two main parts (black and white), the vignetting that gives an aura of mystery to this “dramatic break”, and best of all is the natural framing of the little one. . protagonist, the comma. As it is a very small element of the image, its author ingeniously used this trick to highlight the center of interest, in this way the gaze goes directly to the comma and does not get lost in looking for the central motif of the image. He also used other tricks for this necessary action, such as the shallow depth of field to focus only on the subject and a little more and the bright contrast. If you look closely, this is the brightest area in the entire photograph. Besides all these reasons, which are not uncommon, I like the symbolism used for the break with the comma, the aesthetic and thematic coherence, all photography “speaks” the same language. The drama with black and white and vignetting, the break with the comma and spaces, an element as small as a comma but with great symbolic weight. Congratulations José Francisco!