Weekly Challenge 5: Landscapes

New weekly challenge. We have 4 challenges in which you have only impressed me more and more: Black and White, Portrait, Green and Love. Today, I bring a new challenge, with a popular theme and that everyone tends to like.

Every week I will propose a new challenge, it is a topic that you will have to capture in a 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. The subjects will be varied, from portraits to macro photographs, through landscapes, black and white photographs or babies. Topics will be offered on Saturdays, so you have the entire weekend to work on them. You will have one week to upload your photo (one photo per participant), until Friday of the following week. On Saturday I will update the article with the photo that captivated me the most and I will propose a new topic, and so on? It is not a contest. Just an excuse to dust off the camera, give it a little life, and practice everything you’ve learned.

  • This week I want you to photograph a landscape of your choice.
  • As I said earlier.
  • This is a very popular topic and will pique the interest of most readers.
  • So try to make it original.
  • Shocking.
  • Different.
  • Funny.
  • Sad.
  • Happy or whatever.
  • Feeling.
  • But remember that it is very important that the photos speak.
  • That they are addressed to us.
  • That they tell us a story.
  • That convey a feeling.
  • An idea.
  • A feeling.

I leave you some articles that I published previously with advice on landscape photography:

IMPORTANT: In the photo description, mention the keyword “Landscape Challenge” followed by a caption of your choice. Did you already have previous photos on the subject of the challenge? Great, please mount it. It works for me too.

Are you up for the challenge? Dazzle me!

Unsurprisingly, this week’s challenge was a success. Seeing the photos you have taken and uploaded, you can walk through the most attractive corners of the world.

As part of the landscape challenge, I loved the thematic variety he captured with his cameras: each landscape is unique and tells a unique story, the one that its “photographer” saw and felt at the time. Don’t worry about the processing in Photoshop, or the fact that some photos seem more level than others, the important thing is to take the photo and enjoy it, with an analog, digital, SLR, compact, post-processed, natural, with filters, camera, without them, with. The important thing is to have a good time, and I think we have done it?

So I’m updating this post with a selection of photos you’ve shared on the Facebook wall, this time quite large due to the sheer amount of awesome quality jobs that have been sent. If you don’t see your image here, it doesn’t mean it’s not good, I promise you, I just can’t download them all.

I would keep all the photos you uploaded to Facebook, they are all great, but if I really had to keep only one, I would surely have the portrait of Miriam of the Licancabur volcano, I love the human-nature contact that is transmitted through the photo It is a beautiful illustration that, even when photographing a landscape, can bring external elements (people, animals, etc. ). It is always a portrait of a landscape, but this new exterior element gives it a really interesting point.

The photo is symmetrical, perfectly composed, there are horizontal layers of colors that divide the frame, with an element that stands out in this order: the volcano. Tomorrow a new challenge, on a great topic. The issue will be related to this, how do I tell them? Baaah, will I tell you tomorrow?

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