Using iphone smart phone and apps for creative street photography

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Want to get creative with travel street photography with only an iPhone?

You don't need a camera bag full of gadgets, lenses, and tripods to get interesting, creative results. With a little thinking outside the box, all you need is a smart phone and a cool app or two. Read on to find out how working with the minimum of what you've got can actually enhance the creative process. The method discussed is also intended to further emulate human "seeing" and take a viewer even deeper into a shared experience at home or while traveling.

Article by fine art photographer Skip Hunt

Let's Get Creative

Using nothing but an iPhone or smartphone of your choice!

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I recently backpacked in Mexico and wanted to experiment with getting my load as light as possible. And yet, I also wanted to be able to express myself creatively from the road without limitation.

Another desire was to be able to show and share how it feels to be in a particular place and a particular time frame rather than simply a split-second snapshot.

The solution was to play with using various panoramic image apps to capture many images of a given scene. Of course everything is moving and changing so perfectly matched-up compositions are impossible. However, I found the blurs between different segments of a given scene gave the viewer more of an impression of what you might see in a stretch of time rather than an instant. No one sees that way anyway. When you see, you focus on this or that and the rest gets blurred out in your perception. You don't completely take in a complete scene in an instant. Instead it's a series of images that "caught your eye" over a few seconds.

This method of using stitched panoramic techniques sort of approximates the natural process of "seeing" a given scene completely or emulates it nicely. You can do this with a simple iPhone and one of the many panoramic apps. Or, you can also do the same thing by taking several photos with any camera and stitching them later with desktop programs.

For my experiment, I wanted to see what I could do on-the-spot and "live". So this is one of my favorites using this technique. In some ways, I feel it shows my perspective and impression of a given scene better than video can, because with video you're free to look at the whole scene as you please getting your own impression. With this method, the photographer acts as more of a director of the viewing experience... directing what he/she feels is most important or made the biggest impression while standing in a given spot in place and time.

For the "Magia de D.F." and "Alfa" images above, I used only an iPhone 4, the Autostitch app, and the Iris photography app to punch up the color and add a little texture.

You can see more Skip Hunt travel photography in Mexico with only an iPhone by following the gallery link HERE

Hasta,

Skip Hunt
Austin, Texas

More of this Author's Links

See more of the author, Skip Hunt's fine art work in print.

Skip Hunt Visual Art
Fine art photography galleries by Skip Hunt.
A Keleidoscope of Color
Website and blog containing travel writing, video, photography and audio from the road.
Skip Hunt Photography
General gallery of photography by Skip Hunt.
Skip Hunt SAATCHI ONLINE
Skip Hunt's SAATCHI ONLINE gallery.

Skip Hunt on Amazon

See More Skip Hunt's Motorcycle Adventure Travel Books!

Fine art photographer Skip Hunt of Austin, Texas traveled Westward via motorcycle in search of the exotic within the mundane. He found so much more! This issue contains the entire set of chronicles from Texas, New Mexico, Colorado, Utah, Nevada, California and Arizona. What began as a curious wandering with no particular path or direction, became a powerful life-changing adventure. Sometimes we must become lost before we can truly find our way.
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Let me know what you think of this technique and it's look. Feel free to ask any questions or drop links to the exact apps used in this article.

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skiphunt

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