Entries Tagged 'Patterns' ↓

The Art of Patterns part 2

Getting creative with patterns

Blogged by: Saumil Shah

In Part 1, I touched upon some examples of artistic photos through patterns occuring in nature. I shall now discuss how to get more creative with patterns in nature. The previous example with the palm fronds was very well illuminated and had bright, vivid and pleasing colours. Sometimes, the subject exhibiting the pattern itself may not carry pretty colours or may be poorly lit. But the pattern itself may be gorgeous. The photographs discussed in this post are examples of patterns formed by silhouettes.

The photograph below is of another palm leaf which was quite poorly illuminated. The tips of its fronds were beginning to wither away and it wasn’t brighly coloured either. However, the pattern formed by its leaves was beautiful.

Patterns with silhouettes

I stood close to the palm leaf and focussed on the fronds so that the shape formed by the pattern is very sharp. Behind the palm plant was a lawn, and having it out of focus yielded the green colour filling in the spaces between the fronds.

The spine of the leaf is straight, slanted slightly. I used this to my advantage for applying the Rule of Thirds to this photograph. Think of the photograph divided into three columns. The eye is led from the top to the bottom, with the diagonal line slicing through the centre column. The diagonal separates the picture into two regions. As opposed to the previous example, these regions exhibit bilateral symmetry and similarity.

The beauty of the pattern is brought out by the silhouette.

Continue onwards to see my best shot of the day when hunting for patterns in nature.

The Art of Patterns part 1

Artistic photography from your own back yard

Blogged by: Saumil Shah

Patterns occuring in nature make for extremely artistic photos. And for seeking out patterns you do not need to travel to the far corners of the Earth. It would be great if I got the opportunity to fly over the Sahara and photograph the uniform ripples in the sand dunes, but looking at objects closely in my own back yard can bring out quite a few beautiful subjects!

Nature is always aesthetic and therefore photographing objects occuring in nature will almost always lend themselves to be pleasing to the eye. What makes a beautiful artistic photograph depends on how you compose the photograph, how the subject is illuminated and some basic camera settings.

Let us see a few examples. The photograph below is a close up of a palm leaf. I have chosen to capture only a small section of the palm plant. What is left out is as important as what is captured. I do not want the viewer to think about anything other than the beautiful symmetry of the fronds of the palm leaf. These fronds remind me of calligraphic strokes. Simple, straight and uniform.

Palm fronds example 1

I spent a couple of minutes properly composing this photograph. The photograph is based on the famous Rule of Thirds. The spine of the leaf forms a graceful curve beginning from about 1/3rd photo height down from the top left corner and ending almost near the bottom right corner. The curve divides the photograph into two regions. The top region is filled with dense green strokes formed by the fronds. The eye of the observer is led from the bottom right corner to the top left part of the photograph. The bottom region could have been empty but I chose to zoom in on this particular area of the palm plant where I could fill up part of the bottom region with tips of fronds from another palm leaf below this one. The aperture is set to f/5.6 which gives an average shallow depth of field, conveniently blurring out the background.

Last but not the least, I chose to illuminate the subject in the best possible manner. Leaves and flowers are translucent. Having the sun or the light source shine through them makes their colours vivid and bright. The risk here is that you would be taking photographs either against the sun or in blazing sunlight which may cause problems in exposure. These can be avoided by careful positioning. If you cannot change the orientation of the subject, simply walk around it until you get an angle you like. In the photograph above, the light shining through the palm fronds gives them a bright green colour.

Let us see how you analyse the next photograph. The subject in the photo below is the same palm plant, photographed from a different angle.

Palm fronds example 2

Continue onwards for my thoughts behind taking this photograph and see whether your observation is in line with mine. It doesn’t have to be, though.