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D o u g K e y e s - Becoming Language. Becoming Language The work deals with issues related to memory and programmed vs. learned experience. How much does the outside influence our programmed DNA over generations? How do we know what we know? These multiple exposure photographs document the subliminal information we gather as we move within public spaces. Susan Bowen Photography: Overlapping Multiple Exposure Panoramas Shot with a Holga. Frank grisdale. Multiple exposure film photography. Index1.html. Putting two or more captures on top of each other in a single image multiplies the potential for impact and opens up new avenues to creative expression. Whether you want to inject motion into a static shot, add moody atmosphere or dreamy nostalgia, or enhance one subject with the texture of another, multiple exposure offers a myriad of possibilities.

The techniques complement portraits, landscapes, flowers, and architecture--just about any subject. Creating multiple exposure images is rather easy. Fine-tuning them for a striking, professional result can require some care, but isn't brain surgery. Do It All In Camera? Exposure Is Critical Whether you're shooting digitally or with film, setting the appropriate exposure for in camera multiples is critical. The basic rule of thumb is that for two exposures, you stop down the aperture (or increase your shutter speed) by one f/stop from normal exposure. If this sounds hard to remember, there's a much easier solution.

I am not an artist - creative photography. Photography techniques: Sun/moon multi-exposures. Artist Profile: In-Camera Collages Take Manhattan | Raw File. In photography, chance is often the overlooked understudy of talent. New Yorker Brett Beyer embraces this philosophy with his New Amsterdam project. Shooting lower Manhattan with a Holga and a Zeiss Nettar, he invites flaws and doubles exposures and then reshapes the results. Beyer chooses these more eccentric cameras specifically for their light leaks and focusing problems. “These errors,” he says, “allow chance into the process and give me results I never would have intentionally gotten.” The New Amsterdam images are collages assembled in-camera through overlapping the exposures and manually advancing the film. Beyer prefers these techniques to creating the effects digitally as the analog eccentricities surpass what one could emulate on a computer.

Read on to see more of Beyer‘s work and take a look behind the scenes of a DIY Manhattan photography project. Photo: Brett Beyer Pages: 1 234567View All. Thoughts About Photography: Holga Double Exposures. « Design by Robert Frost | Main | 3200 Ilford Delta Film » July 4, 2005 Double Exposures are a fun and simple way to get artistic and abstract photos. I have been experimenting with taking double exposures with my Holga.

It is easy to take multiple exposures with a Holga, you just don't advance the film. The fun thing is you never know what you are going to get. 1. 2. 3. I hope these tips help some of you out. Multiple Exposure Photography. My definition of multiple exposure photography is the practice of making more than one exposure to create a composite image which occurs at the same moment the image is captured. Basically, it must be accomplished in-camera and not while using software such as Photoshop. Multiple exposures can be achieved in a variety of ways, and to date I employ 3 methods. 1. I simply take a photo and cock the shutter again, without moving the film, for a (hopefully) predetermined number of times.

Knowing the number of exposures in advance allows for precise composition and exposure. 2. I lay down a solid chunk of images on a roll of film by advancing the film a few millimeters at a time, not frame by frame. 3. 4....? Thank you for the input given & support shown for this page. APOGEE PHOTO MAGAZINE: Increase Your Creativity with Multiple Exposures. By Jim Altengarten, exposure36 Photography When I don’t see any photographic opportunities at a location, I often shoot a few frames experimenting with various techniques to give my creativity a jump-start. This article explains four multiple exposure techniques you can try. We’ll discuss the techniques first and provide information about how to set your exposure for multiple images on the same frame later. The first three techniques work best when the camera is on a tripod.

Soft Focus There are many ways to produce a soft focus effect. Technique #1: You don’t have to purchase new equipment. Use a wide aperture to minimize depth-of-field in both shots. How you throw the subject out of focus is important. This technique works well with landscapes, flowers, and people. Near-Far Soft Focus Technique #2 is an unusual one that often has the viewer perplexed as to how the photographer created the image. This technique also uses two exposures on the same frame. Soft Focus Zoom.

Digital Double Exposures: Blasphemy or No Big Deal? Solar Eclipse Photography - Multiple Exposure Sequences. Overlays: Double Exposure Photo Technique | greyscalegorilla/blog. Film Shooters. . .Multiple Exposures - Photography & Digital Camera Forums. Multiple-exposures « David 23 Photos – Lo-Tech Film Cameras – NOW DIGITAL. Penn Station Waiting for My Train – Multiple exposures using Holga 120 Moby Kitty – Holga 120 photo Lily over exposed – Photo taken using Holga 120 Buildings over my head – Photo taken with Holga 120. Multiple exposure in photography – Photo podcast #32. Pho­tog­ra­phy pod­cast #32‚talks about mul­ti­ple expo­sure in pho­tog­ra­phy.

In this pod­cast we dis­cuss the dif­fer­ent ways we can cre­ate mul­ti­ple expo­sures includ­ing in cam­era mul­ti­ple expo­sures (with dig­i­tal and tra­di­tional cam­eras) as well as cre­at­ing mul­ti­ple expo­sures using an enlarger or Pho­to­shop. The above 2 photographs‚were taken ‘in cam­era’ by expos­ing 2 images on 1 frame of film. PHOTO OF THE WEEK This week, the pho­to­graph by Esther Her­nan­dez known on Flickr as‚Maguapho­tos‚ is very apros pos because it is a mul­ti­ple expo­sure cre­ated in a graph­ics pro­gram.

I com­ment in the pod­cast on why I think this pho­to­graph is fantastic. ‚- Thanks as always for com­ments by‚Rob, Al, DaronJ and Cindy on our last pod­cast on pho­tog­ra­phy tele­con­vert­ers . Thanks very much to Sami­rah and Tegan, mem­bers of our pho­tog­ra­phy forum‚for their sug­ges­tions on future pod­casts. We LOVE com­ments and sug­ges­tions so please send more. Garry Black Photography.