While working on my Aperture Priority assignment, I found it pretty easy to find inspiration and create feelings when it came to these photos. For example, this is a picture of my dog named Coal. He LOVES attention and can’t go a day without it. So when I took my camera out to take pictures, of course, he followed me outside and laid perfectly down on the grass then posed for me. Don’t take these plants as flowers, they sadly aren’t flowers, they are weeds. I thought I’d be cool to take a photo of the weeds with my dog because it represents the dog still enjoying the backyard even if there are weeds next to him. You know, I think I’m going to use this photo the next time my dad tries attempting to get me and my siblings to pull weeds for him. The Aperture work that went into my photos was really good! I found myself traveling around campus and at home to take pictures of many things. There was just so many options and I think aperture work shifts your emotions a lot when you have the subject still and the background or foreground blurry, along with having the background clear and making you question what is blurry in the front of the camera. I believe that I caught great pictures and I’m glad I was able to demonstrate that in my photos. All in all, I felt the raw emotions of the photos when I was taking them and reviewing them.
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