Kindly share your C&C for my below image.
Regards,
Tejal
IMG_2057 by Tejal Imagination, on Flickr
Kindly share your C&C for my below image.
Regards,
Tejal
IMG_2057 by Tejal Imagination, on Flickr
Very artisitic, I think this would work even better in black and white.
This is an interesting image, Tejal and I suspect you are right, this would not be nearly as strong as a B&W image.
Where this image does not work as well as it might is that the softness we encounter is in a significant foreground element. A sharp foreground and a softer background work quite well, but this is not easy to accomplish in street photography.
I wouldn'd say "ordinary", but I would say very difficult to do in a street scene. You need the cooperation of the subject, who must stand extremely still and not move, while the background does move, in other words, the scene must be posed.
The other approach is to use a flash with a slow shutter speed. The flash freezes the subject in the foreground while the background moves on. The difficulty here is light drop off and again, this type of technique works well in a studio where you can light the background independently from your subject. In street photography, this is not likely to happen.
The third scenario has the photographer panning the subject as they move, whereas the background blurs. This needs a lot of practice to pull off and a lot of the shots will end up in the trash bin.
Thanks a lot for providing this detail. With flash I have seen some streets shots n were wondrful. Don't know how they managed to do. I am very much interested in learning this.
Panning yes, I think that's the easiest way to get blurrrd /moving bg but the most difficult to capture. I have tried that recently (not at night but though) but it's very very difficult. ☺
You are after getting a lot of good advice, for me I like the image.
"Street photography doesnt allow selective color processing."
Why?