Location: Richmond, VA Gender: Male Total Likes: 0 likes
heh heh heh
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Of Bands and Performances < on 6/15/2010 3:22 AM > | Reply with Quote
Please let me know what you think...particularly about how the people are framed in the photographs.
Sometimes flickr doesn't like to play nice; just click the placeholder image if that is the case...
#1 (Lymbyc Systym @ Ground Zero)
#2 (Lymbyc Systym @ Ground Zero)
#3 (Slow Six @ Ground Zero)
#4 (New Pioneers Society @ RPI Earth Day)
#5 (New Pioneers Society @ RPI Earth Day)
#6 (@ RPI Earth Day)
~Chappie
[last edit 6/15/2010 4:10 AM by zomgw00t - edited 1 times]
"By the early 1970s, techniques of tape manipulation were being superseded by synthesizers, especially the Moog synthesizer, which could theoretically produce any type of pitch or timbre, but usually made a sound like a cat chewing a bee." ~ BBC Radiophonic Workshop - The Alchemists of Sound
Location: Edmonton/Seoul Gender: Male Total Likes: 2660 likes
Your Friendly Neighbourhood Race Traitor
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Re: Of Bands and Performances < Reply # 1 on 6/15/2010 3:30 AM > | Reply with Quote
I'll be honest, as a live music photographer myself, I can't stand faces that are lit only in red stage lights. In those cases I take out the colour and make them black-and-white, and they usually don't look nice.
6 is an amusing portrait, by the way, but I know musicians--if she sees it, she'll hate it.
Location: Richmond, VA Gender: Male Total Likes: 0 likes
heh heh heh
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Re: Of Bands and Performances < Reply # 2 on 6/15/2010 3:38 AM > | Reply with Quote
Posted by Steed I'll be honest, as a live music photographer myself, I can't stand faces that are lit only in red stage lights. In those cases I take out the colour and make them black-and-white, and they usually don't look nice.
6 is an amusing portrait, by the way, but I know musicians--if she sees it, she'll hate it.
Yeah, I wish the students who run Ground Zero would do something about their choice of lighting; it's awful for photographs.
~Chappie
"By the early 1970s, techniques of tape manipulation were being superseded by synthesizers, especially the Moog synthesizer, which could theoretically produce any type of pitch or timbre, but usually made a sound like a cat chewing a bee." ~ BBC Radiophonic Workshop - The Alchemists of Sound