Monday, March 26, 2012

Sarah: Sequence in Motion

In the first set of images, sarah focuses on a brown cow that has stopped in a field.  The cow then turns to run having been spooked.  I like the motion of the dirt flying up from under the cows hooves. This change in direction clearly shows the motion of the picture. I particularly like Sarah's second set of images of a parrot sitting on a metal cage.  The detail of the feathers adds great texture to the image.  I also like her shallow depth of field to show the parrot, but then have the people in the background more blurred. The movement in this set is shown when the parrot shakes and fluffs his feathers.  It is neat how the head of the parrot is more still motion and then as you move down the body of the bird, it becomes more blurred motion like on the end of the tail.  This picture also does a great job of color.  In Sarah's final set of images, she shows the flow of water from the spout of a pot (picture one) to the point of impact in the pond (image two)  I really like how the second image flows easily from top to bottom and how the bubbles are clearly seen on the top from where the water just came from.

Sarah: Playing With Light

Sarah does an excellent joy capturing the warmth of her images. She highlights figures with both darkness and with brighter lights. Her first image of tree branches does a wonderful job demonstrating this. The darkness is shown as a shadow on the underneath layer of the leaves, while the tops of them are almost illuminescent.  The converging lines of the branches both big and small draws your eye through the entire picture. In her second photo, she highlights a church resembling Notra dame in the evening.  The way the lights from underneath the doors and windows gives the picture a mystical feel.  The third image is shot out of a window inside mi tierra.  The lights from inside the window look as if they are colorful confetti falling to the ground outside. I like Sarah's fourth image a lot because of the wonderful texture that cane be seen as the sunlight shines through the tarp.  At first you hold your gaze on the bring sun spot, but then your eye moves to a dark spot to the left that is a shadow of a butterfly.  Her final image show both light and dark through shadows in the waves.  It almost seams symbolic having the light waves represent life and the darker waves to represent where the dead fish lays, having just crossed over from the light side.

Light





Motion and Sequence

Here Comes the Pitch...
Galloping