Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Frames, Frames, and more Frames


Although the door is in the lazy frame, it is fully lit up, unlike anything else on the photo making it the focus of the photo. This shows the lazy frame can sometimes have the subject.

I'm not sure if you can see it, but there's a piggy bank right next to my desktop's tower, behind my sub woofer. I intended to make it immediately to the left of the lazy frame so it illuminates with my computer's blue LED's, but it didn't work out too well and my tower is more the subject of the photo.
The lazy frame contains a plastic fruit ornament, showing its lack of importance, compared to the contrast between the yellow walls and the blue lighting of my room.  The cross sections of all frame lines have no clear subject, except for the middle left cross sections, where there is contrast, making the watcher focus on the room.
Sorry about the lighting, I once again forgot about the assignment so the only time I could really go outside to take a photo was in the dead of night. The lazy frame itself is in pitch black, where only the nocturnal light illuminates itself and the wall beside it. The lighting is directly on the hypothetical cross sections of two scene lines. This creates one's eyes to focus on the lighting, causing it to be the picture's focus.
 Sorry once again for the lightning, but a tree trunk blocks out the lazy frame, but the horizontal middle frames of the picture, where the road is present, is lit up. That and my neighbor's window, making all the middle frames but the lazy frame the focus in the picture.
This shot probably took the longest and was painful to do... Nothing really resides in the lazy frame, but on the right of the lazy frame my face is visible as a reflection, making it the focus of this shot. This lies on the hypothetical cross section of two frame lines.

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