If you have a macro lens, this is your challenge. If your camera doesn’t have one, whatever, if you are able to capture the little details, can you participate in this edition of the Weekly 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. The themes will be offered on Saturday, so you have the whole weekend to work. You’ll have one week to upload your photo (one photo per participant), until Friday of the following week. Friday or Saturday I will update the article with the photo that most captivated me and propose a new theme, and so on?
- Photography has the objectives that every photographer wants to give it.
- But in my humble opinion.
- One of these objectives is to take the viewer to a different world yet to be explored.
- To do this.
- As a photographer.
- You can go on safari or travel.
- To exotic countries.
- Looking for natural landscapes.
- Shooting stars.
- But macro or retail photography can have the same effect on the viewer and cost less?.
In this week’s challenge, I want you to look around you for elements, objects or subjects and represent a minimum detail of that theme that we don’t normally notice: it can be a texture, a color, a repeating pattern, folds, a groove . In short, any detail that we forget daily but that may be striking. (You may want to take a look at this article I wrote on macro photography. )
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, include the keyword?Details of the challenge?followed by a title of your choice.
For those who are not from Facebook, I have enabled the participation of new social networks.
Thank you for your participation
I think that the choice of the topic “details” was a success, judging by the level of participation and the quality of the work. We have seen the typical mosquito eye macro, but also less frequent details of photography such as fruits, pens and even other types of details, perhaps larger like Laura’s window, but which are still a detail seen in the context in which they were photographed.
This week I’m staying with Caracoles, by Marco Gómez. Usually you don’t see 2 snails traveling together in this way, the photo has its merit. Good lighting, correct approach, perhaps the only thing that would have framed under the rule of movement, leaving more space in front of the snails than behind, thus highlighting the direction in which they were moving.
Otherwise, a nice photo. Congratulations Marco.