In a world where visuals speak louder than words, capturing eye-catching images has become a necessity for every creative soul. With Midjourney, you can explore AI-generated artistry to take your…
Cheryl Hamer and Glenys Garnett are landscape photographers who ‘come at’ their landscapes from a slightly different perspective; here they explore both their differences and their similarities and how the march of technology continues to aid and abet their creativity.
During the same shoot this weekend with Maeve I persuaded her to pose for a shoot looking at portraiture and specifically setting up some shots for exploring double and multiple exposure further. H…
As the first retrospective of the work of Hannah Höch opens at the Whitechapel Gallery, AnOther presents a collection of the best collage art
Sometimes your concept can't be told in a single frame. Try these tips from seven pro photographers to master the art of the multiple exposure.
We've all attempted multiple exposures. We do it when we want to create a specific feeling when shooting portraits, and we do it when we want to expose correctly for an architectural photograph client, to correct in post. We use a tripod, to make sure the images are identical, and we either use the camera's automatic stop metering to compensate and expose all the needed
multiple exposure image of ballerina performing attitude in studio
When photographers intentionally capture more than one image per frame, surreal, complex layered images like these 33 eye-catching multiple exposures can result.
The ELA is not just a test of reading and writing, it's a test of stamina and how well kids can "switch registers," meaning quickly switching from one genre to the next. Since the brain uses different functions to process different types of text, students not only need stamina practice, they also ne...
In 1890 the Milton Bradley Company published a historically significant manual on teaching color to children called Color in the School-room: A Manual for Teachers. It was exceedingly scientific for…
Norwegian visual artist Andreas Lie merges verdant landscapes and photographs of animals to creates subtle double exposure portraits. Snowy mountain peaks and thick forests become the shaggy fur of wolves and foxes, and even the northern lights appear through the silhouette of a polar bear. Lie is undoubtedly influenced by his surroundings in Bergen, Norway, a coastal city surrounded by seven mountains. Many of these are available as prints and other objects on Society6. More
ABOUT THE ARTWORK This image is an experiment of multiple exposure in camera, and how to show the passing of time on a static subject. I chose this statue because of its character, and the way it stood still against the sky. By shooting multiple images of it at different angles and putting them together in camera I wanted to show movement, and how everything around us changes continuously. If you look carefully enough, nothing stays still, everything moves as you move as an observer. The original is printed on Hahnemuhle Photo Rag Satin 310 gsm 100% Cotton white satin-finish paper and manually signed at the bottom. Original Created: 2021 Subjects: Landscape Materials: Paper Styles: Abstract, Abstract Expressionism, Conceptual, Expressionism, Fine Art Mediums: Digital, Black & White, Paper DETAILS AND DIMENSIONS Photography: Digital on Paper Artist Produced Limited Edition of: 5 Size: 8 W x 8 H x 0.1 D in Frame: Not Framed Ready to Hang: Not applicable Packaging: Ships Rolled in a Tube
To do a double exposure intentionally, you just expose the same frame of film twice. Here's how to do it with a digital camera.
I started experimenting with cyanotype several years ago as I wanted to be able to produce prints of my photography at home. I started out using digital negatives but soon I was working with botani…
'In the round' is a very specific niche of multi-exposure photography. You can use this technique to create beautiful, almost painted-like surreal images.