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Entries in composition (127)

Monday
Jun292009

Eight is Great

 


Today is my youngest's birthday. He's eight; old enough to conduct an intelligent and interesting conversation. Young enough to still make me smile with his questionable sense of humor and incredibly innocent approach to life.

Of all the photos you take of your kids, I love the ones that embody exactly where they are at a particular age and stage of development. Here, he's still silly, while his older sister plays like a grown-up girl with a baby on her hip and no time anymore for leaf hats on rainy days and other kinds of foolishness.


Do you have a photo that seems to reflects the essence of an age? A picture that reminds you time is flying and this precious moment will pass?

Monday
Jun222009

The Calm Out Back

a full menu
inflatable starfish
and a palm tree made of glass
anchored in the bay
lights dim
to that familiar tune
drenched in the remains
of an evening sun
and buoyant conversations
she seeks
the calm out back

* * *

I've been infatuated with words lately. The whimsy and weight of them. I captured this image at the beach last summer and found that the words followed a few days later. Do you find that images linger in your mind and take shape in new ways? Do you let the words come to you just as the images do?

Tuesday
Jun162009

confessions of a 365 dropout

141/365 141 - SOOC

I hate to even have to say it outloud, or in writing, but it dawned on me the other day;

I have failed in my efforts to keep up with the 365 project.  Heavy sigh.

It's certainly not the biggest deal in the world. I can begin again at any time and kind of pick up where I left off (I guess) but there was just something magical about starting on Jan 1 and actually thinking I would/could stick with something every single day for an entire year. I did manage to make it for something like 141 days. I think that's fairly impressive.

Regardless of the fact that I'm officially throwing in the towel on the project this year, I learned a few things along the way that might help those of you who are still committed and diligent in your photographic efforts (I wholeheartedly applaud you btw).

Here's my follow up to Stephanie's original post offering her tips on sticking with it.

1. Keep a 365 idea notebook handy. Anytime you drive by something that catches your eye, jot down the location so you can't revisit on a day when you have time to snap off a few pictures. Anytime you have a fleeting thought about something you've been wanting to capture in a photograph, write that down. When you're feeling uninspired and out of ideas, use the lists in your notebook as guides.

2. Keep an eye on your battery. Make sure it's charged (plug it in before bed) and have back-ups handy.

3. Take your camera to social functions. It's fun to round out a collection of still-lifes with some pix of friends and family.

4. Try to shoot at least one shot each morning. I know this was on Steph's list but for 141 days, it was my mantra.

5. Don't wait for perfection. As Kate recently urged, 'do not wait for perfect light'. Just shoot!

6. Plan regular photo walks or field trips for yourself. Go alone or with friends.

6. Shoot from the hip. Literally. Sometimes the less invested we are in getting the shot, the more likely we are to capture delightful surprises.

7. Pick up a few extra memory cards to carry with you so you never end up with a full card when you're out and about.

8. Give yourself permission to shoot the same subject over and over again. If there is something your are drawn to shoot, then try capturing it differently on different days. Be inventive and the repetition of subject matter becomes interesting, not boring.

9.Get involved in shooting for regular photo features around the internet, like the One Word Project, Best Shot Monday and Love Thursday.

10. Never underestimate the power and beauty of your SOOC shots. Why spend time editing the shots that don't need to be edited. Use the 365 project as the practice to get your shots right the first time! Less editing time means the less time the 365 project takes each day and it leaves more time to shoot.

One thing I was reminded of as I played along this year was that paying attention to the details of my daily life, camera in hand, was totally therapeutic for me. I had no agenda but to shoot and there were many times I was blissfully lost in shooting. It was amazing and enlightening.

If you started on Jan 1 this year then today is day 167 for you. Almost half way home. Surely you have some ideas for us on how you keep it up. Anything that keeps you shooting like the prolific shutter sisters that you are would be helpful. Links to your favorite captures always welcome.

Tuesday
Jun092009

Getting It "Just Right"

I just finished reading Everyone Is Beautiful by the lovely Katherine Center a few days ago.  I thoroughly enjoyed it and could relate to the main character on so many levels, but one pleasant surprise I got from the book was a peek inside the process of old-school film photography.  I'd say this coincided quite nicely with my recent foray into the world of plastic toy cameras.

And that got me thinking about the courage it takes to click the shutter on a film camera, lacking the instant feedback of an LCD screen.  I realized that with digital, I can look at a photo I'd just taken, and if it's approximately what I was going for, I just tell myself I'll "fix it" at home in Lightroom--crop it, change the angle, etc.

When I took the photo above, I decided to try to get it "just right" then and there.  Now, "just right" happens to be a pretty subjective matter when it comes to photography, and that's something we each have to decide for ourselves.  For this specific photo, I knew exactly how I wanted it framed and at what angle, and instead of taking one or two shots that were merely useable, I took the time to concentrate on what I wanted in that photo, and after several tries, I got the exact composition I was looking for. 

I believe there is a time to Just Shoot It, and I also love to Shoot From the Hip.  Now, however, especially since I'm going to be working with film some of the time, I would like to work on more mindful shutter clicking.  This will probably be difficult for a shutter-happy individual like myself.

How about you?  Do you have an image to share that you took special care to get "just right," meaning the way YOU wanted it to be?

Wednesday
May272009

Mystery from the Fabric of Life

One of my favorite photographers is John Loengard. His "As I See It" book of black and white images sits on the table beside my bed in good company with Annie Leibovitz's "A Photographer's Life" and a borrowed copy of "The Family of Man." I keep it there for inspiration and I can't tell you how many times I've flipped through the pages and poured over his photographs, finding something unique with each view. In his preface to the book John Loengard writes about discovering photography at the age of twelve and goes on to say...

"Since then, I've met many others who fell in love with photography at around that age. Invariably, magic is the word we use to describe what we discovered. Still, the fact is, photographers work only with what's present. I suspect our chief emotions are anticipation, frustration and patience (if that's an emotion) – balanced by a marvelous sense of elation when things go right: when we think we've captured in a photograph some missing feeling, or hidden beauty, or bit of mystery from the fabric of life."

When I went through the process of selecting just twelve images (from easily a thousand options) to share in an open critique with long-time, well-respected ASMP photographers a few weeks back, I was intriqued to discover a common theme in my favorites – a tension or uneasiness. Question marks. Perhaps a bit of mystery from the fabric of life.

Share an image from your collection that gives you pause and makes us think.