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A tree in liquid air
Image Title:  A tree in liquid air
 
 By: Nick Karagiaouroglou  
  Copyright ©2008



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Photographer Nick Karagiaouroglou {K:92493}
Project N/A Camera Model Canon T90
Categories Abstracts
Florals
Nature
Film Format 24x36
Portfolio Lens Tokina SZ-X 80-200mm f4.5-5.6
Uploaded 5/5/2008 Film / Memory Type Kodak  Royal Supra
    ISO / Film Speed
Views 63 Shutter
Favorites Aperture f/
Critiques 8 Rating
Pending
/ 2 Ratings
Location City -  Karyani
State - 
Country - Greece   Greece
About Made with my favorite method for small and fast vibrations/rotations during the shot. (Dynamo with metal stick attached asymmetrically on the rotator, the whole thing attached to the camera.) This brings many times something "impressionistic-like" and that was my cavgue thought, when I did that. But this time it went somewhere between the tree and a reflection in water. I'd be glad for any thoughts/comments/critiques.
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There are 8 Comments in 1 Pages
  1
Fabio Keiner   {K:42431} 5/5/2008
a liquid tree in solid air :))


Dave Stacey   {K:115782} 5/5/2008
You've come up with a nice natural abstract here, Nick!
Dave.


Gust@vo Sch3v3rin   {K:118786} 5/6/2008
Muy interesante!, un efecto de naturaleza pictórica, me gusta!. Un toque de magia y fantasía para un racional pensador...;-)

Un abrazo!


absynthius .   {K:17062} 5/12/2008
In fact i find this image as if taken from a window of the car, while swiftly moving by- or as you also say like a water reflection and it does have the impressionistic like feeling- all due to a motion effect that stands in contradiction to the static nature of the subject.
It evokes calm and vivid attitude of the world outside the window of passers through, of travellers of the places and things we see on the course have that travelling.

on the techincal part of it, i only am grateful to you for the explanation- as i have not tried it ever; but it seems that it may be used time after time for an effect as such.

cheers Nick,
v.


Nick Karagiaouroglou   {K:92493} 5/16/2008
Thanks a lot for repeating the title, Fabio!

Cheers!

Nick


Nick Karagiaouroglou   {K:92493} 5/16/2008
Thanks a lot for the nice comment, Dave!

Nick


Nick Karagiaouroglou   {K:92493} 5/17/2008
Be sure that it was less "fantasy" than it was (and still is) the search for a method of pointilistic like photography, Gustavo. I don't have anything todo with the liga of the eternal incompetence. I can imagine, but I *think*.

And the method of the rotating dynamo still doesn't get exactly what I want, though it promised to do that. I'll have to combine it with a push, I guess. The calculation shows that it would be very pointilistic-like then. So, the theory is ready, let's go for the experiment now.

Cheers and thanks again!

Nick


Nick Karagiaouroglou   {K:92493} 5/17/2008
Hi Visar and thanks a lot for the nice and thorough comment! The technique goes into that impressionistic direction but still not exactly what I think of. I'll have to combine it with a push, as I saidto Gustavo, and see if the theoretical prefdiction about it meets reality in some acceptable range.

The technique itself is not hardto do, you only need to have a dynamo and some small metal knobs. The only thing you have to watch out is to nit damage the camera when you somehow attach the dynamo to it. But some rubber bands will do the job quite well of fixing it on the camera.

Cheers!

Nick


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