search

sidenotes

Love Thursday
Don't forget Love Thursday has moved back over to Chookooloonks. Keep sharing the love!

5 Easy Steps
Sister Karen shares the easy and fun way to snap your own holiday card photo (a la self-timer style) over at Alpha Mom. Click it.

November in B/W
There's a black and white theme happening at Springtree Road. Too cool.

One Sweet Shot
Don't forget to honor your favorite photo this month! OSS is this Sunday.

Holiday Photo Contest
Enter your holiday photos at the Snapfish/Redbook contest today.

Travel Photo Contest
Alaska Airlines has a photo contest going on with a grand prize of $5000. Woot!

Get Creative
HP has officially launched its Creative Studio. Check it out.

click around
gg button
My site was nominated for Best Photography Blog!
Add to Technorati Favorites
Shutter Sisters. Get yours at bighugelabs.com/flickr
« Tweak the Antique | Main | Hope »
Monday
17Dec

Mastering the art of the rinky-tink-tink: part two

121707_600.jpg

I can’t claim any state of zen with my point-and-shoot camera. Most days, it takes near-herculean restraint to not chuck it off the end of the nearest wharf.

Taught my three-year-old several new curse words this weekend trying to capture him indoors — the NERVE! — where my press-down-halfway-and-hope-for-the-best pipsqueak stubbornly refuses to focus.

But a less-than-SLR camera need not be a creative crutch. Right? Right.

+++++++

I'd like to think that creativity is more than 'have’ or ‘have-not’. To accept the "you've got it, and you don't" myth would be utterly demoralizing on those days when I'm feeling photographically tapped — those days, I'd rather take a deep breath and say to myself It's not just me being inherently dull, or hopelessly all-thumbs with a camera. I'm just forgetting something, getting lazy.

Here's what helps me get my groove back — before pressing the shutter, an ABC of creative checkpoints:

ANGLE. Take risks. Lie on your belly. Crouch. Get up on a chair. Try a few without looking through the viewfinder, if an inventive angle requires it. Before turning away from a scene or subject, take at least two or three more unconventional angles or stances. When I start to get bored, chances are good it's because I've spent too much time with the camera at eye-level.

BACKGROUND. Do a visual inventory of everything around your subject — passerby, traffic, signage, household clutter — and change your stance to minimize visual distractions. Do whatever it takes for a clean frame, because there's some law of photography physics that assures the expression of a lifetime will occur in the one frame of a hundred that includes the potbellied guy standing stage left with the MASTER BAIT & TACKLE t-shirt.

COMPOSITION. At the last moment, look through the lens abstractly to consider the shapes, lines and balance formed by your subject and surroundings. Reduce what you see to blocks of colour and pattern, and respond to that stripped-down vision from the gut. This always leads me towards what often feels counter-intuitive, or quirkier than rule-of-thirds. While it may not always work, it's always worth a try to tilt, shift and crop for more mindful composition — as opposed to everything is inside the frame and no one’s got a finger up the nose: check.

If you’re an enthusiastic enough photographer to be here, you know all this already. But it’s forgetting these basics that gets me stuck in snapshotty ruts — and blaming those ruts on my wharf-bound pipsqueak.

Which, in the absence of something better, doesn’t do any favours for me or the Kodak.


Reader Comments (1)

MASTER BAIT & TACKLE this is classic! (and sad but true, i'm sure i've seen it down here in Texas.) these are great reminders, thank you!
January 23, 2008 | Unregistered Commentercamerashymomma

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.

My response is on my own website »
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
All HTML will be escaped. Hyperlinks will be created for URLs automatically.