lee
Member
I hope not too Mr Callow. I dont like bokeh in large format as I try pretty hard to make the image in focus all over.
lee\c
lee\c
Struan Gray said:But I read Jim's comment to refer to earlier abstract art movements, and although I can sort of swallow the idea that photography freed up painters from the demands of representation, I don't see any specific photographers who can be regarded as having lead from the front. Those like Steichen and Stieglitz who are usually credited with shaking photography from complacency strike me as lagging a long way behind the avant garde painters of the day.
Struan Gray said:But I read Jim's comment to refer to earlier abstract art movements, and although I can sort of swallow the idea that photography freed up painters from the demands of representation, I don't see any specific photographers who can be regarded as having lead from the front.
Jim Chinn said:I don't know if you are poking fun at me or not...
A dialog that leads towards learning that might begin with, "what is wtf", and then lead you down a path beyond acronyms.matt miller said:wtf is "socratic"?
Thank my brother Andy. He's the author. Also check out his web recapitulation of the first multimedia magazine: http://www.ubu.com/aspen/aspen.htmlDave Wooten said:Thanks for that Duchamp site!
John, the socratic method as I encountered it in college and again in grad school came down to torturing students who came to class unprepared until they somehow came up with the desired answer or ran away. It didn't work very well, students who came to class badly prepared once did it again and again ...jjstafford said:A dialog that leads towards learning that might begin with, "what is wtf", and then lead you down a path beyond acronyms.
Struan Gray said:[...] One optical effect not touched on in most treatments of bokeh is the way that obstructions close to the lens affect the depiction of the rest of the scene. Telescope users call this 'apodisation' when done deliberately. Perhaps the simplest example is the way a chain-link fence does and does not dissapear when you photograph through it. If the fence is well outside the depth of field it will not appear itself, and it will have no effect on the in-focus parts of the image, but it can substantially affect the out of focus parts of the image, imprinting its characteristic symmetry on them.
25asa said:Too many lenses, not enough time!
David said:I took this image with a 420mm Imagon on an 8x10 without any sink strainers in it. The near branches are in sharp focus but everything else goes wonky pretty quickly. The vortex in the trees has me mystified. I don't know if it's like the swirly effect on the previous image. Any thoughts? The picture was an experiment.
medform-norm said:Hi David,
maybe it's just our computer, but we can't see any images! Can you post them again or give a pointer to where they can be seen (in an APUG gallery perhaps?)
Cheers,
medform-norm (the socratic)
David said:I have a Mac![]()
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Or it could be that since your post registered 5 minutes after the photo post was done (less if you throw in a couple of minutes to compose and post your message), that the text was posted and available before the photo completed uploading and the link established by the web site software.medform-norm said:We have three Mac's and it doesn't make a darn difference... so it's still ma(c)gic!
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