I’ve been bouncing around an idea of using slides and transition effects to display a photo as a dynamic composition.

The “Beta” example below demonstrates a simple two layer process — but I envision taking a photo through multiple levels, each layer/image different but still recognizable as being built on the one before or the core image. The viewer would watch as the images change before them – flowing smoothly from one step or stage in its life to the next.

Still working out my final vision for this, but if you view the demonstration below think of it as a test bed of a type of virtual gallery where you not only see the images but also their progression to/from other forms.

To view, click anywhere on the image below. I’ve done my best to compress the video file but it’s still about 9.6mb. Even at that level of compression tonal range, contrast and details have suffered — but then, it is a test bed.

The MP4 video file runs 3 minutes 36 seconds and is in 720p  H.265 format. There’s audio as well if you have speakers have a listen.

Abstract Regression

For this beta, I started with 20 specific subject photos, made on the same day in the same forest and then selected ten images to work with. From those ten I then created other versions as abstracts.

It’s a little rough around the edges but I’m still developing both the thoughts and techniques. Let me know if you have any problems viewing it. Feedback or suggestions are certainly welcomed. Perhaps some of you have done similar things and can save me wasted effort.

*Music: “Tulip Trees” – Rob Costlow – 2005

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Yvonne
14 years ago

Very cool!~

Markus
14 years ago

Good work, Earl! Besides the images and their transitions I like very much what you didn’t provide: the concoction of effects seen only too often in presentations.

This is wonderful quiet and meditative work, differentiating in a narrow theme and a narrow color set, with matching music. The only thing I’d miss is sometimes a marker at the start of a sub-sequence to alleviate jumping back to the start of a transition (however I don’t know if and how this is possible). Oh yes, and a fade-out of the music at the end of the show would be nice.

don
don
14 years ago

The series played very smoothly. I found the abstractions that moved to a discrete, sharp object very interesting and worthwhile. I think the concept is innovative, original and well worth pursuing, Earl. Fine test bed start!

Monte Stevens
14 years ago

Very good, Earl! Something I had never seen before or thought about. Looking forward to seeing this done with multiple layers.

Eric Jeschke
14 years ago

Really like what you’ve done here, Earl. Very interesting technique and a great subject too. The music went well with the images. My only quibble (very minor) would be with the sliding transitions. Somehow they seemed a little jarring compared to the soft, abstract subject matter and the subtle transitions between concrete and abstract. Wondering if fade-in/fade-out or some other kind of transition would work better?

Sidney
14 years ago

Well my internet is soooooooo slow…I was not able to see anything :-(

Paul
14 years ago

Excellent, Earl. I enjoyed seeing the abstract first, then seeing the ‘actual’. It was a nice bit of mind candy. We always like to try to figure out what something is when we see an abstract and you provided those ‘answers’ in a nice way. The only thing that I would say is to perhaps build the music in the beginning and fade it at the end, giving nice transitions on both ends, but that’s just a personal preference.

Richard Querin
14 years ago

Earl. Great job with this. I loved the painterly->photo transitions best. And of course I love Rob Costlow. Beautiful choice. While I didn’t find the slide transitions jarring like Eric, I do see the merit of his suggestions of fades, or perhaps other things to play with and try out. And yes, it was mercifully free of 15 types of cheesy transitions. It’s easy to go overboard, and clearly you knew all that. It’s a great way to showcase a series of photos. I’ve always been a fan of some of the stuff done at places like Animoto.

What did you use for the production? iMovie maybe or something heftier? I’ve been playing a lot with Blender for photo work lately (including animations). It’s a definite learning curve but so powerful and open-ended.

Mark
14 years ago

Very nice Earl. Very creative idea – as Paul said, you build the anticipation nicely to figure out what is behind the abstract. I kept wanting to reverse the video though to go backwards because some of those abstracts were very cool.