Our Picture This! assignment this month was “Leading Lines: Into Infinity.” We called for images that brought the viewer’s eye into the frame with various compositional techniques, including leading lines, S-curves, and parallel lines that seem to meet at infinity, or vanishing points. Readers responded with a host of architectural, urban, natural, and highway images, all of which bring the eye deeply into the frame.
Eiffel Tower |
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Jay R. Solomon’s photo brings together leading lines with vertical form that both resolves and carries forward the visual play. He photographed with a Canon EOS Digital Rebel and a Canon 18-55mm lens; exposure was f/9 at 1⁄125 sec.
© 2010, Jay R. Solomon, All Rights Reserved
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Morning Sun |
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Mike Zale surrounded his compositional ploy with atmospherics of early morning fog. He photographed with a Sony Alpha A500 and an 18-55mm lens.
© 2010, Mike Zale, All Rights Reserved
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Amtrak 1 |
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While we had quite a few photos using railroad tracks, this one by Wood Dickinson used the railroad car, with the conductor providing a fascinating counterpoint. He photographed with a Canon F1 and a 50mm lens using Kodak Tri-X pushed to EI 1600.
© 2010, Wood Dickinson, All Rights Reserved
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Tulip Fields |
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Greg Tucker sent us this colorful image made near Mount Vernon, Washington, photographed with a Nikon D200 and a Nikkor 28-105mm lens with a polarizer.
© 2010, Greg Tucker, All Rights Reserved
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Poplars |
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Jonathan Goatcher made this image of poplar trees while lying down in the road at a tree farm near Boardman, Oregon. He used a Canon EOS 40D at ISO 200 with an exposure of f/32 at 1.2 seconds.
© 2010, Jonathan Goatcher, All Rights Reserved
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Montana Plains |
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Lawrence G. Davies sent us this quintessential plains rail shot made with a Fuji FinePix S2 Pro and a Nikkor 17-35mm lens. Exposure was f/8 at 1⁄500 sec.
© 2010, Lawrence G. Davies, All Rights Reserved
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Monument Valley |
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This road stretching into infinity is surrounded by the grandeur of Monument Valley, Utah. Cdr. John Newlin, USN (Ret.) shot with a Nikon D300 and a Tamron 18-200mm lens with an exposure of f/13 at 1⁄640 sec.
© 2010, Cdr. John Newlin, USN (Ret.), All Rights Reserved
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Fort Point Officers’ Quarters |
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Linda Herman made this intriguing shot at a most photogenic spot in San Francisco, Fort Point. She shot with a Pentax K2000 and an 18-55mm lens with an exposure of f/4 at 1⁄10 sec.
© 2010, Linda Herman, All Rights Reserved
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Reichstag |
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The structure of the Reichstag in Berlin, Germany, is a great source for many fascinating points of view, including this one by Mark Dyason made with a Kodak EasyShare V550 and an exposure of f/2.8 at 1⁄30 sec.
© 2010, Mark Dyason, All Rights Reserved
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Farm, Indiana |
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We were struck by the elegant simplicity and light of this photo by Art Hansen. He photographed with a Nikon D300 and a Nikkor 18-200mm lens with an exposure of f/11 at 1⁄200 sec.
© 2010, Art Hansen, All Rights Reserved
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The Road To Cabezon, NM |
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Ossy Werner sent us this shot of a ribbon of a road lit by dappled light coming through breaks in the clouds. The image was made with a Nikon D200 and an AF-S Nikkor 18-120mm VR lens.
© 2010, Ossy Werner, All Rights Reserved
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42nd Street |
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This almost bucolic view of 42nd Street is a rare sight captured by Ralph Selitzer with a Canon EOS 50D and a Tamron 28-300mm lens.
© 2010, Ralph Selitzer, All Rights Reserved
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Pecan Orchard |
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At first view of this shot by Bill O’Malley it looks like we are looking at a split screen, but it’s only the lines, reflections, and light that play that visual trick. He photographed with a Nikon D100 and a Nikkor 24-120mm lens. Exposure at f/8 was 1⁄640 sec.
© 2010, Bill O’Malley, All Rights Reserved
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The Long Road Home |
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The long highway and bright yellow lines are offset by billowy clouds and deep green foliage in this photo by Eddie Baugher. Exposure with a Canon EOS Digital Rebel XT and a Tamron 28-75mm lens at ISO 200 was f/13 at 1⁄500 sec.
© 2010, Eddie Baugher, All Rights Reserved
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Washington, DC Subway |
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Jeff Sherman made this photo in DC’s amazing subway using a slow shutter speed to blur the train as it came into the station. Exposure with a Contax G2 on Kodak Vericolor color negative film was f/8 with the shutter on B (he thinks for about 4 seconds).
© 2010, Jeff Sherman, All Rights Reserved
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