markku_kivinen 0 Posted January 9, 2001 Eille, elle est vraiment top-notch ta photo! Elle m'a frappé dans la face! Link to comment
Guest Guest Posted March 11, 2001 Pas mal pantout. J'ai aussi aimé deux de tes autres photos dans ton portfolio: celle avec la façade de la mairie, et celle avec les sculptures en glace. Mais celle-ci est la meilleure. Link to comment
andrevallejo 0 Posted March 28, 2001 Funny...there's a problem with my OS,all comments apeared in french...! Nice pic ,anyway...well done. Link to comment
roberto_lins 0 Posted April 2, 2001 Nice color rendition, although the right side of the photo looks a bit dark to me. A slight touching might do it. [Andre it's not your OS setings. In my experience, if you put french speakers together, they speak french no matter where they are and how multi-national the group is. Voice softwares aren't up to the web development, so they write...] Link to comment
alan_little1 0 Posted April 5, 2001 what you mean ... just like English speakers? Surely not. How shocking. Link to comment
simon_wakelin 0 Posted April 6, 2001 Eric, could you better illustrate the technique used; did you utilize lighting of a certain temperature to record this colouring over the 30 sec time period? Link to comment
melanie_trowbridge 0 Posted May 14, 2001 Perfect as it is, front lighting draws in the eyes, fades nicely into darkness. Perfect! Link to comment
Stock-Photos 1 Posted August 2, 2001 Overall the picture looks OK. Cool effect but the image is not very pleasing to my eye. The lighting looks too unnatural. Sort of like an SUV headlights illuminating an ancient Native American's home. It's always fun to experiment with night photography. I give it a 5 on Asthetics and 8 on originality. Link to comment
raymond_liow 0 Posted September 28, 2001 I really like this one but real curious to know what you did to get that lighting. I'm just blindly guessing your car headlights. Fill us in, will ya? Merci! :) Link to comment
markku_kivinen 0 Posted April 4, 2002 Hi, I'm a friend of Eric's, and I know for a fact that he hasn't visited this page for at least a year. What he did was set the camera on a tripod, set the aperature to f/5.6 with the shutter speed set to bulb. He opened the shutter and then moved to the side to paint the building with his flashlight. To paint, you simply move the light around, and try as best you can to leave the light in the same area for equal amounts of time. Maybe with a blue gel on the flashlight he could have made the light look more natural ... who knows. Hope this helps. Link to comment
Recommended Comments
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now