Morataya Photography: Blog https://moratayaphotography.zenfolio.com/blog en-us (C) Morataya Photography (Morataya Photography) Mon, 16 Mar 2020 06:48:00 GMT Mon, 16 Mar 2020 06:48:00 GMT https://moratayaphotography.zenfolio.com/img/s/v-12/u889974404-o485370260-50.jpg Morataya Photography: Blog https://moratayaphotography.zenfolio.com/blog 120 120 Living a Capturable Moment https://moratayaphotography.zenfolio.com/blog/2015/8/living-a-capturable-moment

http://www.slrlounge.com/living-capture-worthy-moment-good-put-camera-gds-sake/
 

I feel too often with the ability to "Instagram" a photo and to blast it all over social media, that we've lost touch with living in the moment even more than we ever have in the past.


Whether you're using your professional DSLR and trying to maintain artistic composition while remembering technical settings or you're using your smart phone to snap that photo of dessert after dinner, sometimes we get too caught up in the idea of sharing a moment with the world to really stop and savor what is happening right before you. Whether it is something as wonderful as spotting wild dolphins in the ocean or just that crêpe you ordered from a coffee shop. We submit these photos into an ocean of thousands of other photos wanting to share, brag, or preserve that moment in time. When I feel that we should put down the camera just as this article says, and "stay in it".


The article I'm linking to was inspired by my favorite scene from the movie, A Secret Life of Walter Mitty. In this scene Ben Stiller and Sean Penn's characters are both watching a snow leopard in the wild (something incredibly rare) and instead of taking what could be prize winning photographs of the leopard, O'Connell, Penn's character decides to just live in the moment. That's when O'Connell tells Walter, Stiller's character , "I just want to stay in it.". Both the article and scene from the film really drive the message home - put down the camera and enjoy that moment; live it.

Kishore Sawh, the author of the article, talks about a personal experience where he did just that and how he remembers the details of the memory better than any photograph could capture. And that's just it, we fall back too much on the ability to photograph everything that we dull the power of our senses and our mind. We dumb down the memory, we don't fully commit to the moment. And to me that's just an awful shame.


In short (TLDR) - put down the phone, throw away the selfie stick, stop trying to get the exposure right. Stop and smell the roses from time to time, and try to do it more and more often.

http://www.slrlounge.com/living-capture-worthy-moment-good-put-camera-gds-sake/

]]>
(Morataya Photography) Appreciation Ben Stiller Instagram Kishore Sawh Life Morataya Photography SLR Lounge Sean Penn Secret Life of Walter Mitty article life photography https://moratayaphotography.zenfolio.com/blog/2015/8/living-a-capturable-moment Fri, 07 Aug 2015 02:04:06 GMT
NASA's Releases the World's Largest Photograph... https://moratayaphotography.zenfolio.com/blog/2015/1/nasas-releases-the-world-s-largest-photograph Want to see some impressive Megapixels? We all know that Megapixels only matter when you want to print something out completely large, like a poster or billboard. However I think at this point it's called Gigapixels isn't it? When it comes to a 1.5 billion pixel image that by itself requires about 4.3 GB disk space, I think there's no argument about impressiveness.

As the title to the article says, NASA has released the world's largest photo. In reality it is a composite of other images (411 to be exact) but together they make an utmost amazing photograph that's just out of this world.

And the photographer? None other than one we all know and love - Hubble.

 

 

If you weren't a fan of Hubble before this, I hope, will change that for you. While a center focus isn't always the subject of Hubble's photographs I can't help but admire the symphony one of the satellite's photographs can create. Here in this photograph we have over 100 millions subjects all culminating in one of the most beautiful of orchestras - a galaxy. And the nearest galaxy to our own, the Andromeda Galaxy which is just about 2 million light years away.

 

The fly through style video pans over the photograph composite traveling over 40,000 light years and covering quite a lot. How does this image look like in person in large print? I wish I could say I knew. But I can definitely tell you I would quickly pay real money to see and look at this photograph in person.

 

 

Here's the link to the YouTube video:

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=udAL48P5NJU

 

 

Here's a link to the article on this photo and a link within the article to see the image full resolution on your computer:

http://www.spacetelescope.org/images/heic1502a/

 

]]>
(Morataya Photography) NASA andromeda galaxy hubble light year photograph photography space stars stellar https://moratayaphotography.zenfolio.com/blog/2015/1/nasas-releases-the-world-s-largest-photograph Mon, 19 Jan 2015 19:49:13 GMT
In which Morataya starts a blog... https://moratayaphotography.zenfolio.com/blog/2014/4/in-which-morataya-starts-a-blog So I'm rebuilding my website via Zenfolio now. For now this seems to be the best option and the next step in this crazy endeavor of going full time photographer. There's probably a science or formula to creating a blog that'll keep people entertained, interested, curious, and subcribed to. And I aim to figure that out and provide! 

 

Please stay tuned as in the next couple of weeks I put together this new website and hopefully make it what it I've always wanted my site to be! 

 

-M

[email protected]

MoratayaPhotography.Zenfolio.com

theFotobot.com

]]>
(Morataya Photography) Florida Photographer blog morataya morataya photography photographer portraits https://moratayaphotography.zenfolio.com/blog/2014/4/in-which-morataya-starts-a-blog Wed, 02 Apr 2014 23:42:36 GMT