Thursday, December 11, 2014

Balance & Contrast 2:


Kaleidoscope 1
I used this photo of the city and cropped it to just show the upper side of these buildings and really like how it turned out. I like how the foggy look of the photo taken early in the morning makes it look lighter and more mysterious. 



Kaleidoscope 2
What I really liked about this kaleidoscope isn't just the look of the lights coming from each end, but the look of the shadows from them all coming in together and making it really look like one photo. 

Diptych 1
What I love about this diptych is that it captures a certain personality almost of Alice. I love portrait photography and the ability to show who a person is through the format of a photo and I feel that this diptych really shows that. 

Diptych 2
What I like about this diptych is that the photos were taken candidly of the same girl on different days but still show a connection to each other. I see this diptych as not two correlated photos but as one photo being a continuation of the other. 


Kaleidoscope 3
This kaleidoscope was my personal favorite just because of the shades of colors in the background and the look of the spider web seeming to weave together and the almost geometric look of it. 

Triptych
I love this triptych because all 3 photos were taken the same evening as the sky got darker and i like how the pictures showed the transition from a light sky to a light city. 

Thursday, December 4, 2014

Balance & Contrast

Triptych
I like how these three photos I took at the beach recently all come together and show different looks of the water. A calm look with the sand, a colder feel from the center photo, and the last the water is a more dangerous look. 


Diptych: Contrasting Texture
I liked in this picture how the different textures of brick lined and the look of the image. 



Value
I love the colors in this photo and really like the cold foggy look it gives off. 



Scale
This photo is showing the scale of a person to the ocean and how you can see the horizon in the back depicting the size of the ocean itself.