Actually he did use the color system earlier on in his life. Mary Alinder found some of his old color negatives and she asked Ansel if she could produce them and he agreed, but after producing a couple pictures with her husband, Ansel ordered them to stop.
Adams did a lot of color work. He was a consultant for Kodak and Polaroid and tested color materials for both. He also did a lot of commercial work to support himself. He was very old before his black and white fine art work began making him much money. Check out the book, Ansel Adams in Color.
Yes
yes
Ansel Adams was born on February 20, 1902 and died on April 22, 1984. Ansel Adams would have been 82 years old at the time of death or 113 years old today.
Ansel Adams was a master of "previsualization" and is considered to be the inventor of the Zone system. Using these two techniques and his sometimes unique perspective, he produced negatives that were technically superior, which resulted in outstanding prints. He seldom had to manipulate his prints in the darkroom to produce the quality that he is famous for. Ummm... the final line of the above answer is totally incorrect. Ansel was literally famous among photographers for how much time he spent in the darkroom revising his prints. The Zone System got his initial exposures correct, but that's just the starting point, not the finishing point.
He was famous for his landscape photography and more importantly for using very high f - stops even the size of a pin hole as to get very close and extremely far things in frame in focus.
It is impossible to say. A contest would have to be held.
Documentary Photography is covering a subject or action using photos.
Ansel Adams was born on February 20, 1902 and died on April 22, 1984. Ansel Adams would have been 82 years old at the time of death or 113 years old today.
Ansel Adams was a master of "previsualization" and is considered to be the inventor of the Zone system. Using these two techniques and his sometimes unique perspective, he produced negatives that were technically superior, which resulted in outstanding prints. He seldom had to manipulate his prints in the darkroom to produce the quality that he is famous for. Ummm... the final line of the above answer is totally incorrect. Ansel was literally famous among photographers for how much time he spent in the darkroom revising his prints. The Zone System got his initial exposures correct, but that's just the starting point, not the finishing point.
there are some photos of tsar nicholas and his family. this photos were repaired and colored using modern technology. only few pictures were saved during the bolshevik revolution
He was famous for his landscape photography and more importantly for using very high f - stops even the size of a pin hole as to get very close and extremely far things in frame in focus.
Some photos on Flickr are copyrighted, others are not.
Photojournalism is taking photos of events, such as war, and using the photos to tell the story. They sometimes add text, such as captions with the photos, but the photos are basically what tell the story.
By using photoshop of course
It is impossible to say. A contest would have to be held.
Using papers
The current iPod Nano does not display photos.
The easiest way to transfer photos from your iPhone to your PC using iTunes is as follows: Connect your iPhone to your PC using a USB cable. Open iTunes if it does not open automatically. Click on your device icon located in the upper left-hand corner. Click on the Pictures tab. Check the Sync Photos box. Choose the destination folder for your photos. Click on the Sync button in the bottom right-hand corner.Your photos will now be transferred from your iPhone to your PC using iTunes. It is important to note that all photos will be erased from your iPhone after the photos have been transferred.
download itunes onto that PC and upload the photos onto itunes and then you can download the photos onto your iPod.