Archive for the ‘fine art’ Category

To read more about his inspired project created by Nichole Van, read our first month’s post.

This month I was inspired to create something with freedom and vintage in mind with a high fashion vibe.   The field behind our house is blanketed with green and dotted with yellow flowers.  Too soon the green hills will turn to gold as California is so well known for.  I wanted to take advantage of the lushness  before it changed.   Here is what I ended up with for April.

And I’m breaking one of my rules this month and posting more than one image because I had a hard time deciding which I wanted to use.  Here are the runners up.

Please make the rounds this month and be inspired by the beauty and the talent of the girls in this group starting with Martha Schuster | i see the moon photography | Long Beach, CA.

For more information on this {elevate} a fine art photography exploration, go HERE.

Please continue through this month’s circle to see all of the ridiculous talent of my partners in this project starting with my sweet friend kamee june | kamee june photography,  orange county, ca.

And I promise, a post about the incredible high school senior workshop is coming soon!!!

Happy Monday!

FOG

I love it!  Here in the San Francisco Bay Area, our mornings are often blanketed with thick fog.  It lasts until just about the time I drop off the last of my kids at school.  I can not tell you how many mornings I’ve been driving through the fog on carpool duty loooooonging to stop the car, pile the kids out into the beautiful fog and photograph them.  But of course, that isn’t realistic.  The kids have no desire to pose out in the damp chill first thing in the morning and I definitely wouldn’t want to try to explain to the office lady why they are late for school.  So needless to say, we hadn’t been able to capture the foggy mornings…

until last week.  My daughter had to miss school one morning for a doctor appointment across the bay, and that morning just happened to be full of fog.  I wasn’t sure if the fog would last until I dropped the boys off at school, but I grabbed my camera just in case.  Luck was on our side and there was just enough fog lingering, once my carpool duties were done, to drive up to the hills for a few shots before heading to the doctor.  My vision for this image included a billowing white gown, trees, and mysterious fog.  Well, I failed to share this plan with my daughter, so she was wearing comfy sweats and sneakers instead.  I knew I wouldn’t have another opportunity for a fog session before this {elevate} post was due, so we forged ahead and shot anyway.

I’ve decided to share my before and after images for this post.  There are so many steps involved in creating these Fine Art Photography images and I wanted to give you a little sense of how manipulation is often involved in some of the images.  Some are more manipulated than others, but this one has some obvious changes.

This is the before, SOOC (straight out of the camera) image I decided to use.

You can see there was a pile of wood on the left side that I removed.  I’ve got the trees that I wanted as well as the fog.  What I’m missing is the dress.  I decided to go with black instead of white since she is already wearing black.  I decided to add a skirt instead a dress and found the perfect one when I Googled.  I saved it, cut, and pasted it onto her and then played around with it to size it just right.  I then had to add some grass to the bottom of the skirt to make it look more natural.  Then I converted it to black and white and added a little more fog.  I used  Florabella’s whitewash texture  set to luminosity, smoothed out the fog a bit more, played around with the selective color blacks and neutrals until I liked what I saw, and saved it.  I came back to the image a few more times and tweaked a few things that I didn’t like.  All in all I’m pretty happy with the final image.  I do miss the white billowing gown, but I’ll save that for another foggy morning.

I hope you’ll make the rounds to the other girls participating this month.  I can’t wait to see what they’ve come up with!  Head on over to Renee Popat | Hyderabad Photographer, the newest member of our circle.

 

Created by Nichole Van, I’m collaborating with a handful of talented photographers in a project to explore fine art every month.  What is “fine art photography”?  That’s been a subject of debate lately on the Bloom Forum as well as in our blog circle.  I’ve been contemplating this and doing a little research to find my own answers.  One thing that I’ve been thinking about is the idea that often fine art is something that evokes wonder in the viewer.  The piece might ask a question or cause you to take a second or third look.  I like the idea that two people could look at the same piece and come away with totally different thoughts or feelings about it.

With that in mind, here is my image for this month.

Join me in exploring the circle this month starting with Maureen Wilson | Mccomb Mississippi Photographer and continuing on until you find yourself right back  where you started.

I know last month I said, “This project feels like Christmas morning every month when it rolls around.”.  But this month, it literally is almost Christmas morning! Even though Christmas has, yet again, snuck up on me this year, exposing the naked truth that I still have SO much to do in the next 13 days, I still feel the magic of this season.  It’s my favorite holiday because  there’s so much focus on joy, giving, family, and faith.  I love the lights and the tree and the beautiful music that can be heard everywhere you go.  I try sneak in moments when I’m alone to ponder the true meaning of Christmas and to reflect on what it might have been like on that Christmas Eve night so long ago.

So, for this month’s elevate project, I wanted to create something that would evoke some of those feelings associated with Christmas.  I’ve always wanted to play around with shaped bokeh so I used this project as a catalyst.  It’s really quite simple to create bokeh of any shape you wish.  All it takes are a few household items, your camera, lens, and a string of lights.  (It did also cost me a Lego set as bribery this month, but it was well worth it) If I were more organized I would include step-by-step instructions, but I’m not so here’s a link to the ones I used.

Please join me in visiting the amazing little circle of photographers who are exploring their own fine art projects this month, starting with Marianne Drenthe | Marmalade Photography  Chicago child and family photographer.

Wishing everyone a very Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays!