
I’m not sure what I was attempting to photograph. Pointing the camera up, capturing lines (power lines?) but mainly grain, dust and shadows. TPW

I’m not sure what I was attempting to photograph. Pointing the camera up, capturing lines (power lines?) but mainly grain, dust and shadows. TPW

Behind the glass, the ‘real’ picture might reveal itself…
TPW

A rush and a push….
Walking through NYC at dusk, letting the camera capture what it could.
TPW

I noticed a peculiar ‘fish-eye’ effect on this image – seen after the image was downloaded and compared with others in the same sequence. Definitely how the camera saw it rather than me! TPW

Fin Wright Stretching the limits of focus

One of many photos I took at Glen Park Canyon in San Francisco using the same technique of moving the camera while taking the shot, but the only one with a certain magic to it. A slow drag produced a waterfall effect and the colors of the scene are jewel-like.

I discovered I can influence the shutter speed on my phone camera by messing with the brightness levels. Its crude, the speed can’t be set but can be influenced and there is no control over ISO but combining it with camera movement gave me some interesting effects which I think enhance the sense of movement. Here someone is just leaving the escalator. I knew it would be impossible to get a blur free shot so why not enhance it?!