I decided to set up my own
little photo studio which makes my office currently a mess but I'm learning something new... My first trials are in yesterday's post...
Not exact matches
The space also functions as my office and my «
photo studio» so it can get a
little cramped.
In the sunlight, the green looks a
little washed out compared to the
studio photos, but the glitter and sparkle is all there.
In our
studio and outdoor
photo tests, images were a
little washed out in bright sunlight, and detail quality was reduced in low light.
We snapped
photos of a co-worker in our windowless video
studio with the lights turned down, and the flash did
little to brighten our subject.
Stieglitz edited the association's luxurious publication Camera Work from 1902 to 1917, and organized exhibitions with the aid of Edward Steichen — who donated
studio space that became the
Little Galleries of the
Photo - Secession in 1905, familiarly known as «291» for its address on Fifth Avenue.
The Christmas table leads to a
little riff on Christmas trees that includes a famous photograph of a dead tree in the
studio of Joseph Beuys, a picture of Beuys» sculpture «Snowfall» (1965), which has three stripped sapling trunks blanketed with felt, and a
photo of Bay Area artist Jay DeFeo (1929 - 1989) under a Christmas tree.
In 1905 the two artists repurposed Steichen's
studio space for photography exhibitions; originally called The
Little Galleries of the
Photo - Secession, the space became known simply as 291 after its Fifth Avenue address.
If you thought that portrait shots looked a
little artificial then these are even more so, but they're well done within the constraints of, you know, not actually having a
photo studio and # 1000 of lights!