You’re ready! Start a new weekly inspiration. Come?
The Weekly Inspiration format is an excuse to stimulate your passion for photography and invite you to participate, every week, with a photo of your creation.
- In the new Weekly Inspiration format.
- I’ll give you a photo every week that will inspire you.
- To participate.
- You will need to take an “inspired” photo of some kind in the photo offered.
- It doesn’t have to be exactly the same.
- But rather be related or inspired by the highlighted photo of the week: you can use the same theme.
- The same type of subject.
- Or photograph a different subject and another subject but imitating the same set of lights.
- For example.
- Any well-crafted photograph will be valid as long as it is clearly seen that it was inspired by the proposed photograph.
- In terms of technique.
- Composition or thematic.
- Otherwise.
- It would not be valid.
The themes will be proposed on Thursday and the deadline to upload the photo will be one week, until the following Thursday when I will propose a new call with a gallery of images that I liked the most, and a highlight among all those in the gallery. . In addition, I will upload a new photo that will be the image that will serve to inspire you during this week. You’ll have until Thursday (with the weekend in between) to capture your image (only one per participant), give away a title and download it.
We offer you several ways in which you can upload your photo to our weekly inspiration channel, remember that the idea is to upload only one photo per participant and only in one of these ways:
A brief summary of the photos inspired by last week’s image
As you know (and if I don’t tell you), my weakness is soulless photos, which pinch me somewhere in my being. And Raquel Fabregat‘s “Shortest Night” is no exception. That’s why this week’s featured photo. It is difficult to stay with one when you like it so much, but there is always something that makes you choose, in this case, besides the difficulty of getting a good exposure in these circumstances and saving it, I find it a very correct composition. . Rachel bent down to see with the same eyes as the child. And that’s what we see, your world. At your level.
The contrast of light and darkness, the contrast of age, size. Capture light, sparks and torch smoke to perfection. From behind, showing without saying, with innuendo. The story, that of the child with the father who does not let go of his hand, who is there, accompanies him. Letting you enjoy your fireworks for free, but offering your safety. Thank you Rachel for taking us back to the age of illusion, for being happy with little, for being surprised by everything.
I have seen many portraits in which you play with a magnifying glass and always find them interesting and inspiring, each evokes something different is that the look of each photographer is one world and each portrait is another, this was very inspiring for me and I could not resist sharing it as an inspiring photo of the week, I do not know if it is the lipstick with the background that seems to fail but yes , if this magnifying glass macro effect or what it is, but it fascinates me and seems super expressive. What inspires you?