blue_chaos _photo has added a photo to the pool:
blue_chaos _photo has added a photo to the pool:
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The post This Week’s “Choose Your Own Prompt” Challenge appeared first on Digital Photography School. It was authored by Sime.
This week we’re keeping the creative momentum going with another “Choose Your Own Prompt” format — five fresh ideas for you to explore, shoot, and interpret however you like. Pick the one that sparks something, stick with it for the week, and share your results with the community. No rules, just inspiration.

Find a natural frame in your environment — a doorway, window, tree branches, arches, fences or anything that surrounds your subject. It’s a simple way to add depth and guide the viewer’s eye.
Instead of one dominating colour, look for two colours that play off each other. Complementary (blue/orange), bold contrasts (red/green), or subtle pairings (teal/green). Let colour relationships tell the story.
Capture calm. Early morning stillness, someone reading, soft window light, empty spaces, a pet resting. Focus on mood and subtlety rather than action.
Photograph the same subject twice — once in harsh, directional light and once in soft, diffused light. Notice how shadows, detail and emotion shift with the change in lighting.
Hunt for curves, spirals, zig-zags or wavy lines. Roads, rivers, staircases, shadows, architecture or everyday objects. Use these shapes to lead the viewer through the frame.
You can share your photograph below (Has to be new, not one from your archives!) or you can join / visit our Facebook group and share it there. (You can find that group here)
The post This Week’s “Choose Your Own Prompt” Challenge appeared first on Digital Photography School. It was authored by Sime.
Mark Sansom has added a photo to the pool:
The first cranes at Station Pier were installed in the 1930s, following a major redevelopment of the former Railway Peir.
In the late 1940s another upgrade of port facilities, together with the general shortage of labour, prompted the Melbourne Harbour Trust to adopt more efficient cargo handling.
Wharf cranes enabled cargo to be unloaded from ships and transferred to rail wagons which travelled along railway tracks on the pier.
Tasmanian.Kris has added a photo to the pool:
Found it by the roadside, wings still neat, eyes already gone. I hesitated before taking the shot, then realised hesitation was the whole point. Beauty and decay never stay in their lanes.
Tasmanian.Kris has added a photo to the pool:
I’d been watching them for a while, waiting for order to happen. Three aligned, the fourth ruined it, which made the shot work. Nature does symmetry better than I do, but only when it stops trying.