Sure have, although I don't think you would call a picture of hunting animals a still life.
Adam
>I have enjoyed old still life paintings (hunting animals,
>flowers, fruit, cheese etc) and am wondering if anyone has seen
>this kind of photography; especially in black and white.
>
>
Try Don McCullins still life work.
Fred
Jim,
Edward Weston's vegetables, pots, baskets, and shells are classics. All
were done in B&W (as was almost all of his work) with and 8 x 10 inch
camera.
Hank
Yep and I do that kind o photography. I don't shoot hunting animals, but
flowers, oil lamps, eggs, screws, pretty much anything that will fit on a table
top is fair game. It is relatively easy photography to start with and the
creative aspects are infinite. I especially like the evolutionary process -
start with one setup and modify it over a series of exposures. It is fun to see
what you end up with.
tony
A search in a reasonable library would find both.
Peter Marshall
On Fixing Shadows, Dragonfire and elsewhere:
http://faraday.clas.virginia.edu/~ds8s/
Family Pictures & Gay Pride: http://www.dragonfire.net/~gallery/
and: http://www.speltlib.demon.co.uk/
In reply to: <32F635...@eorann.tamu.edu> from Hank Seidel
<sei...@eorann.tamu.edu>>
> Jim P wrote:
> >
> > I have enjoyed old still life paintings (hunting animals,
> > flowers, fruit, cheese etc) and am wondering if anyone has seen
> > this kind of photography; especially in black and white.
>
> Jim,
>
> Edward Weston's vegetables, pots, baskets, and shells are classics. All
> were done in B&W (as was almost all of his work) with and 8 x 10 inch
> camera.
>
> Hank
.