Boris,

Some things to play with:
Tripod, long shutter speeds and motion blur provided certain elements in the frame. Silky water, wind-blurred trees, passing traffic or people.
Directional camera movements during exposure.
Freeze motion in a condensed moment (a statement hopefully open to interpretation).
Panning.

Compositions that implies a motif with a direction also alludes to speed, imo.

Jostein


----- Original Message ----- From: "Boris Liberman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <pentax-discuss@pdml.net>
Sent: Tuesday, March 28, 2006 8:31 PM
Subject: Talking photography - dynamics


Hi!

Ladies and Gentlemen, perhaps it is time we spent some time talking about photography and photographs rather than processes, work flows and what not.

Recently my attention was brought to a fact that most of my photographs are very static... They seem to be some kind of documentation of the process/moment/event/scene or just a frozen moment in time, static and disconnected from previous and next moments...

I wonder what kind of advise I would get from my fellow PDMLers if I were to ask you - how could I make my photography slightly more dynamic...

Thanks.

Boris


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