The refection of the yellow skull in the center marble was an unexpected easter egg.
You have 7 days to take a photo with a shallow depth of field, using the widest aperture you can, or getting very close to your subject. Let’s brush up on some technical fundamentals, shall we? What is a Shallow Depth of Field? Well, you know those “professional” photos where the subject is in sharp focus and the background is all beautifully blurred? This is a photo with a shallow depth of field – the plane of focus is very thin, and everything behind it (and in front of it) is fuzzy, or soft. This fuzziness is often referred to as “bokeh“, and the type of bokeh will change with lenses, aperture settings, and a few other things.





