If you are a regular reader, you will have seen the article published this week by my collaborator Caro Musso with 20 tips to portray spring. As theory must be put into practice, are you joining this week’s challenge?
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. from portraits to macro photography, 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?
- To portray spring.
- Wouldn’t it be necessary to invoke challenges? It is the typical station that claims to be represented.
- There are hundreds and thousands of ideas for photographing spring details.
- It does not matter if it is raining.
- If it is windy or if it is a very sunny day.
- After all they are different expressions of the same season.
- Perhaps the most photogenic season in history?.
You can participate in the challenge with your spring photo, I’d rather you take it again, but if you don’t have another option, a photo from your own file would also be worth it. Because it’s about YOU taking the picture, not showing us one made by someone else?
As I said before, if you’re looking for inspiration, take a look at Caro’s article.
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?Spring Challenge? Followed by a title of your choice.
For those who are not from Facebook, I have enabled the participation of new social networks.
Happy Spring
It’s never easy to highlight one photo above the others, you know there’s no winning photo or other losers, but I like to highlight an interesting photo every week among those who participated in the challenge and mention an interesting aspect of it.
This week I especially liked the portrait of daisies made by Jacobo. There, the author managed to group the bouquet of daisies in an interesting way, the most central of all of them being the highest. Correct focus and very precise depth of field, thanks to which we all inevitably look at the central daisy, because it is the one with the most focus. Finally, Jacobo achieves an interesting division of the frame into two harmoniously divided halves: a lower white and yellow mattress; and a different colored horizon thus creating a magnificent contrast in the final composition.
Amazing picture. Congratulations, James.