Wednesday, 6 August 2014

Tejasvi Momaya




6 comments:

Unknown said...

Momaya ur pics giv me da feeling if rain unlike many other pics I sw.. I like da detailing of droplets in da 1st pic... I dnt quite understand wat da white thing in da 3rd pic is but it looks very calming against da stony surface.. 2nd pic for me is da poorer version of da 1st one in terms of appeal

Unknown said...

Hey Tejasvi your pics are awesome....Which camera do you use?? The second picture would have been perfect if you would just show your finger teasing the bubble...it would add an element of enjoyment...Also is there any particular reason why you chose to do only close ups???

Unknown said...

Hey,
Thank you for your responses.
@B: I am glad I gave you a different feeling. The 3rd pic is of a fallen white rose. We usually see pictures of droplets on leaves and flowers but I wanted to capture it on a stem hence the 2nd pic.

@F: I do not own a DSLR. It's a bridge camera. I'll show it to you when I carry it to class. Thank you for the suggestion on the 2nd pic but I am afraid I would have not been able to capture the picture with just one hand. I chose close-ups because I wanted to feel closer to the nature after it had rained, we do it very rarely now a days.

Unknown said...

Tejasvi:
A very good set of photographs! I liked your choice of working in close ups and loved the third one the most because I saw it as crushed ice melting in the warm rain which made me almost feel like being in the rain. I'd like you to delve deeper into your journey into closeups. Did you see anything inside each droplet?
A - Ajay

Farah:
Can we refrain from using statements like "the picture would be perfect if...". The photograph is as the artist intended and should we allow it to talk to us instead of asking questions only because we are too lazy?! - Ajay

Unknown said...

Ajay Sir:
I am glad you liked my choice of working with close-ups because I consciously thought of taking only close-ups to emphasize a particular aspect of rains. I had no idea my third picture could evoke that feeling, thank you for letting me know. I never saw it in that light. I did not really observe what I could see inside the droplet while capturing it because I was too hung up on the settings and getting a composition I liked the best. I would like to inculcate a habit of engaging more with what I am capturing. Thanks for pointing it out.

Unknown said...

Tejasvi:
The legendary German architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe coined the now famous phrase “God is in the Details”. (or for that matter, the devil too).
- Ajay