It looks like pixel art, but no, it's pure photography. I take photos at a high ISO value, then pick out the most interesting pieces of noise and process them like "normal" photos.
Classical photography constantly puts in the first place beautiful and clear images, perfect pictures, pretty views, nature, and people's bodies. And most often photographers get rid of defects — noise or poor quality lenses are considered something bad.
With this collection, I want to change the view of defects and show that even in them you can see the beauty. Digital noise is the result of imperfect sensor technology and the purely physical nature of light. Noise creates unique patterns every time, based on billions of variables, and I see this as an opportunity to pay homage to the technology that helps move photography forward.
The titles of each photo are based on associations — I asked friends and followers to tell me what they see there, and chose the most interesting versions.
Superman hiding
- PrecioPrecio en USDCantidadVencimientoDe
- PrecioPrecio en USDCantidadDiferencia de sueloVencimientoDe
Superman hiding
- PrecioPrecio en USDCantidadVencimientoDe
- PrecioPrecio en USDCantidadDiferencia de sueloVencimientoDe
It looks like pixel art, but no, it's pure photography. I take photos at a high ISO value, then pick out the most interesting pieces of noise and process them like "normal" photos.
Classical photography constantly puts in the first place beautiful and clear images, perfect pictures, pretty views, nature, and people's bodies. And most often photographers get rid of defects — noise or poor quality lenses are considered something bad.
With this collection, I want to change the view of defects and show that even in them you can see the beauty. Digital noise is the result of imperfect sensor technology and the purely physical nature of light. Noise creates unique patterns every time, based on billions of variables, and I see this as an opportunity to pay homage to the technology that helps move photography forward.
The titles of each photo are based on associations — I asked friends and followers to tell me what they see there, and chose the most interesting versions.