my kinda truthiness
This is something to own, to make clear: the day we went to Ross Farm I took 300 pictures in two hours.
I’m a ruthless deleter, and proud of it—the final tally was 60 barely acceptable shots, 12 flickrable.
Early on the learning curve my goal was to improve my shooting ratio—to be happy with one in five shots instead of one in twenty (or thirty, or forty). Admirable, sure.
But then I had kids.
And then there were the mid-frame tackles and the naked streaking and the radioactive snot (we won a Boogitzer for the above, and now we're rich) and the blur, the constant, unintentional, tasmanian-devil blur.
So now I must fess up to worshipping the continuous shutter, to being in the market for extra storage, to being shamelessly, unapologetically devoted to the Why Take One Frame When You Can Take Fifteen? school of photographic thought. To be creatively fulfilled (and not demoralized) simply by bettering my odds.
That’s my truth. What’s yours?
What's exploded in your life that’s flipped your philosophy, changed how you take pictures?
Reader Comments (27)
Yous son's eyes are phenomenal, as is that right hand shot.
These are some of those just shoot and delete later pics. As you can see I used some of the "not so great ones", but they are priceless to me.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/24035778@N04/2394364002/
Happy Monday!
I've had professional photographers tell me I need to mentally compose my shots more, to be more deliberate. I don't agree. Of course I think about composition. But when you have 2 kids moving at the speed of light, one shot hardly ever does it!
It's funny you should post this today because just yesterday I was snapping away in my yard with my son, and I took about 250 pictures! I deleted only about 50 of them. I, too, find it hard to delete some that are not very good, but they may have captured a look or a grin that I just want to hang onto. I also take a ton of nature photos. Lately I've been thinking that I'm running out of things to take pictures of in my yard (I don't get out much), so that's forced me to get creative. I'm setting the camera on the ground, or putting it at another angle and not necessarily looking through the viewfinder. I've gotten a lot of nothing, but then sometimes I get something great. Also, since I'm rarely in our family photos, I've been trying to snap a few of my son and me by just sticking the camera out with my arm and pointing it towards us. Yesterday I finally got a couple I like. Here's one:
http://www.mamaofletters.com/Mama_of_Letters/Camera_Happy.html#15
one from my walk.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/14811117@N02/2392636127/
http://springtreeroad.typepad.com/springtreeroad/2008/03/shes-also-a-hel.html
that's my truth. one time at a holiday tree lighting, a husband of a friend made some snarky comment about "take enough pictures yet?" it's how i move beyond 'snapshot' to completely visually pleasing. by taking alot of photos i can see what works and what i like. cause really, i don't know what i'm doing. i just take alot of photos.
i even set my camera setting to the continuous shot so i can hold the shutter and take 3 consequetive frames which has come in handy for action shots of smashing plates, for example. and note: the one in the middle is usually the keeper.
Sometimes it's okay not to take pictures--big statement for a mom like me who used the continuous shooting mode even before the digital revolution. By the way, "extra storage" for me is boxes and boxes of photos filling the shelves of my walk-in closet.
The more photos I take, the more apt I am to catch a moment. Does that make sense?
The thing that has changed me? Digital photography. What a wonder it is. And I LOVE IT WITH ALL MY HEART.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/lizziemarie/2396247010/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/lizziemarie/2396246318/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/lizziemarie/2396245722/
http://marciescudder.blogspot.com/2008/04/on-your-marksget-set.html
http://marciescudder.blogspot.com/2008/04/fantasia-ii.html
http://marciescudder.blogspot.com/2008/04/prana.html
Editing - now - that's a whole other conversation. I always want to keep them all..never knowing if there might be some time or some place where I might want to use them.
On to this question...kids have definitely changed my life and my photography. My daughter is the only one who will pose for me now. And she is three. I get photos of the boys playing football and my 6 year old (third son) will pose every now and again but I'm like you, Photoshop can drive me CRAZY. It takes so much time. And then I'm still not sure if I have the colors right.
I posted a couple days ago about my love/hate relationship with Photoshop. It can be so consuming and overwhelming. I like that some seem to have "actions" that allow them to do the same thing with their photos again and again without have to go through each step but my Photoshop Elements will not let me do that. So I stick my tongue out at all those who seem to figure it out so easily or have more time than I do (not really it just seems the mood I'm in). It seems like you can Photoshop until you are purple.
I agree with you. Take 2 million pics and maybe 10 will come out great!!!
Cheerio!
julie
http://www.flickr.com/photos/23630286@N05/2308700422/
He's getting sick of the constant clicking! It's like I am a member ofthe paparazzi or something...However, I also have to remind myself to put the camera down to take PART in all the fun, not just be the recorder of it!
http://monkeymemories.blogspot.com/2008/04/dont-know-why.html
Then I bought a Canon 50mm/f1.8 lens.
I have used that lens almost exclusively for the two or so months since then. My images are crisper. I rarely have to crop to get the image I want, because I must now move to compose the shot before taking it, rather than depending on a zoom and then editing software to compose the shot. Rather than stifle my creativity, it's forced me to be more creative about how I compose shots. I recently attended the circus and used only that lens from halfway up the arena, so I had to think about how to compose the shots to make them meaningful, since I couldn't zoom in. And I've gotten more forgiving when a shot doesn't come out exactly the way I want; after all, I can't depend on a zoom, so my options are limited.
I love how Ben always looks so bemused by it all, as if in shock...it's adorable and wonderful.