This blog is a showcase for my iPhoneography. All content is original. I take photos, review iPhone photo applications and share how the images are created.
You can check in on my other projects here
Worldbuilder - my blog about writing Science Fiction
And Teknicious - for all things nerdy
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No use crying over spilt milk
Man and Machine
Kayaking on Squam Lake, a late October afternoon.
Tents airing out.
Re-engineer the system of...
14
equinoxe
Retrogasm is 2 years old today. In celebration I am going to go through my archives and reblogging some of my favorites...
Greene’s “dual-process theory” of moral decision-making posits that rationality and emotion are recruited according to the circumstances, with each...
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Skydivers
by Jay Fleck
6 posts tagged Slow Shutter
Subway Series 8 - Stoic - NY, NY
iPhone 4, Slow Shutter, Camera+
This man intrigued me. He was oblivious to the fact I was taking his photo. Like many people on the subway he was in his own world, closing out the strangers around him. I used slow shutter set on 1/16 of a second. The constant movement of the train causes the image to look like a painting rather than a photograph.
Subway Series 7 - Ghosts - NY, NY
iPhone 4, Slow Shutter, Camera+
Millions of people travel the New York subway everyday. Rarely leaving more than a fleeting imprint of their presence. Using a slow shutter with a digital camera captured this image of ghostly impressions of people moving on and off the train.
Subway Series 6 - Patience - NY, NY
iPhone 4, Slow Shutter, Camera+
This man stood so still as he waited for the train. I stood behind him and set the camera to a 1/2 second exposure. If you look closely you can see a person standing on the train platform through the train.
Subway Series 5 - Stance - NY, NY
iPhone 4, Slow Shutter, Photofx
Brace yourself, you are on the train. Rattle, rattle, lurch. Sitting you can relax and tune out. Find a pole, hold on. Lean against a door and ride it out. All in their own little world, tuning out the crush of other bodies. I love to watch people move on the train, balancing with ease or stiff and uncomfortable trying to maintain their dignity in a sea of strangers.
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