Antipodean Adventures with Joe Cornish

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  • Опубликовано: 21 сен 2024
  • second upload - improved audio

Комментарии • 14

  • @jamesjohnston6765
    @jamesjohnston6765 5 лет назад +1

    I thoroughly enjoy this format, as it affords the viewer the opportunity to hear the thought process behind the images and observe the adjustments made by the photographer. Joe is a master at what he does and it is a true bonus to see his visions processed this way. Thank you.

  • @priyankap6828
    @priyankap6828 6 лет назад

    Its always inspiring to see how masters work and think before they make a photograph. Beautiful images. Loved those weeds, purely unseen for me. Thank you for sharing this video with Joe !

  • @glensumner3425
    @glensumner3425 6 лет назад

    Loved seeing your unique eye of downunder Joe

  • @RichardRichardVC
    @RichardRichardVC 6 лет назад

    Much better audio, thanks! Great video

  • @PaulGJohnsonphotography
    @PaulGJohnsonphotography 6 лет назад

    Excellent

  • @allisonbaum1014
    @allisonbaum1014 5 лет назад +1

    I don't understand why these people are so pre occupied with fore ground back ground concept. Dude, the view in itself is beautiful. Just shoot the damn view and call it a day.

    • @largeformatlandscape
      @largeformatlandscape 5 лет назад

      allison baum perhaps it’s something called “subjective taste”

    • @allisonbaum1014
      @allisonbaum1014 5 лет назад

      @@largeformatlandscape No such thing my man! Have you ever opened any magazine or art book? None of them feature images like these because they don't make sense. Only books that feature are photography books and photography magazines. Those are geared towards photographers. Only time Ansel adams shot like that because his lens is wide and he couldn't just shoot the background with out hindering it foreground. So he picked best foreground he could to compensate the inadequacy. SHOOT THE SUBJECT. Focus on and everything else is just a distraction.

    • @largeformatlandscape
      @largeformatlandscape 5 лет назад

      @@allisonbaum1014 Ermm - you need to buy more books. Joe Cornish photographs for the National Trust, National Parks, Post Office, Government etc. Perhaps you have a case of confirmation bias in your reading matter.
      Oh and - Ansel Adams
      shop.anseladams.com/Mount_Williamson_from_Manzanar_p/1701130110.htm
      shop.anseladams.com/Teklanika_River_p/1701184109.htm
      www.gallerydirect.com/art/product/ansel-adams/jackson-lake-in-foreground-with-teton-range-in-background
      www.le-flamant-rose.org/ansel_adams/galerie_64.htm
      And perhaps you could check out Peter Dombrovskis, Jack Dykinga, Charles Cramer, David Muench, etc, etc..

    • @allisonbaum1014
      @allisonbaum1014 5 лет назад

      @@largeformatlandscape Like I said PHOTO BOOKS!!!

    • @largeformatlandscape
      @largeformatlandscape 5 лет назад

      @@allisonbaum1014 Between those photographers, they've illustrated the majority of outdoor books over the latter half of the 20th Century. Jack Dykinga is a Pulitzer prize winning photographer. They nearly all worked for National Geographic and have won popular campaigns against environmental abuses.
      What photographers are you talking about?

  • @allisonbaum1014
    @allisonbaum1014 5 лет назад +1

    Horrible pictures!