Foveal Focus In Photography
Foveal focus in photography refers to aligning the camera’s point of sharpest focus with the photographer’s own point of maximum visual acuity—the tiny central region of the human retina called…
Please Read On ...Foveal focus in photography refers to aligning the camera’s point of sharpest focus with the photographer’s own point of maximum visual acuity—the tiny central region of the human retina called…
Please Read On ...Probably shouldn’t be telling you about this. In fact, just reading this might put you on some kind of watchlist. But here we are anyway. Illegal Art is launching soon,…
Please Read On ...Whispers are already circulating in the creative underground: Illegal Art is about to break the rules. Not literally, of course—but in a way that will make you feel like you’re…
Please Read On ...When building a brand, consistency often feels like the golden rule. For emerging businesses, it can seem intimidating to introduce variant logos – alternate marks, wordmarks, or iconography – when…
Please Read On ...Gestalt principles describe how our brains naturally organize visual information into meaningful groups. They come from Gestalt psychology and are especially useful in graphic design, photography, UI, and branding because…
Please Read On ...A strong brand strategy is more than a great logo or a catchy tagline—it’s about creating a cohesive story across every touchpoint. For businesses with multiple subsidiaries, this challenge is…
Please Read On ...Leica approached infinity focus on digital M bodies as an optical problem to be solved system-wide, rather than something to be corrected solely in the lens. Because the M system…
Please Read On ...This series of six cocktail illustrations isn’t trying to teach you how to make a drink—and that’s entirely the point. At first glance, each piece appears to be a precise…
Please Read On ...Digital sensors did not change the fundamental physics of infinity focus, but they profoundly changed how infinity behaves in practice and how critically it must be treated by the photographer.…
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