[film/digital] Same object, position, lens focal length, lighting, and camera settings (iso, shutter speed, aperture). Canon FTB vs Nikon D850
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
noise dept.
tumblr dot com

Origami Around
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Xuebing Du
Peter Solarz
ojovivo
Three Goblin Art
trying on a metaphor
taylor price
$LAYYYTER

pixel skylines
hello vonnie
d e v o n
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KIROKAZE
todays bird

JVL
will byers stan first human second

seen from Malaysia

seen from Spain
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from Spain
seen from Indonesia

seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from Ukraine
seen from Israel

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Brazil

seen from Türkiye
seen from Brazil
seen from Brazil
seen from Brazil
seen from Japan

seen from Canada
@jinyc-photography
[film/digital] Same object, position, lens focal length, lighting, and camera settings (iso, shutter speed, aperture). Canon FTB vs Nikon D850
❣️ Valentine's Day mini sessions now available! ❣️ Gift a special couples photoshoot for you and your loved one any day in February at the location of your choice within NYC. These 30 minute sessions include your choice of 10 retouched images digitally delivered, all for only $200! Book yours today: https://jinnewyork.as.me/valentines-day
MAZEL TOV
Personal Portrait Session in Boerum Hill Airbnb
New blog posts!
Real Estate Professionals Event in Upper West Side Penthouse
New posts on the blog!
Hand-coloring technique was introduced in Europe in the 1840s, but the practice of hand coloring photographs became more refined and widespread in Japan. By the 1880s, it had become a common practice and a defining characteristic of Japanese tourist photography.
Working on a low wooden table laid out with brushes, inkstones, and porcelain bowls, artists applied colors, prepared with a small amount of buckskin glue, in a delicate and precise manner. In the 1880s and 1890s they began using more vivid colors made from aniline dyes.
The process of coloring a photograph was infinitely tedious, and a master colorist could be expected to produce two or three finished prints during a twelve-hour day. Eventually, studios hired more artists and set up a kind of production line with each man or woman responsible for a range of colors or a particular area of a photograph. One artist colored faces, for example, then he or she passed the photograph along to another who colored clothing, and so on. This greatly increased the number of finished prints in a day. Various sources estimate that by the 1890s successful studios employed anywhere from around 20 to 100 colorists.
Flower seller, Japan. Lantern slides, hand-colored. 8 x 10 cm Creation Date: 1900-1940 Repository: Harvard Fine Arts Library, Special Collections HOLLIS number: olvwork371874
LinkedIn Co-Founder/Author Reid Hoffman Book Relaunch Event
Artist Portraits in SoHo Painter's Studio
2-Day Food Shoot in New Jersey for Ingredion
Mehndi Party/Ceremony in Long Island City, Queens
Food Photoshoot for Baby Brasa in Greenwich Village, Pt. 1
Man Tracks Down People He Photographed in the Street 40 Years Ago to Recreate Their Pictures
I can’t begin to tell you how much I love this! Maybe one day I can do this with my clients too ^_^
Curious fox helping for a photoshoot.
I wish this was my life!
April's 'photoshoot round is up' is now live! Come peep the blog to see my 5 favorite projects from last month: https://www.jinyc-photo.com/nyc-photography-blog
It might be 8 days 'overdue', but I've finally banged out my blog posts about my 5 favorite photoshoots from February, come take a look at album covers, weddings, portraits, baptisms, and more!
https://www.jinyc-photo.com/nyc-photography-blog
modern housing developments
Overhead lighting is for places like kitchens, bathrooms, and garages. Workspaces, basically.
Overhead lighting makes you look AWFUL (think of it like the opposite of when you put a flashlight under your chin to look scary...it’s the same thing, but upside down). Seriously all the best/most flattering lighting is always going to come from the side.