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color, detail, and, of course lighting. The real challenge, to me, is to get a decent DOF which requires shooting in different depths and then stacking in PS. I have a lot of work to do in this area.
Thanks for posting your views about shooting.
Wes
Its great to hear from you. I think one of the import points you make in your comment is, "...At the moment, my list includes...". This is a changing process, dynamic not static. THANK YOU for drawing out that point.
Hope all is well and that spring is treating you kindly in D.C. Keep the rubber side down, Brotherman.
Alec
Thank you again for encouraging me to explore the reasons I shoot.
One of the constants for me is the concepts of Play or Fun. they are the things I come back to when I get stuck. Doing something that makes me laugh seems to allow me the license to shoot whatever makes me smile.
Peace, energy, spirit...and to some extent tenacity are concepts that are driving me at the moment. I think I need to get to the mountains. :) At the very least, get out on my bike.
KG
I really appreciate your comment and wonder how YOU might capture the concepts of Play, Energy, Spirit along the north shore of Lake Superior. We should plan a trip soon and go shooting.
Be well, my friend.
alec
Another even less meaningful concept I use is "take pics of things that look pretty", regardless of the subject. Concept is formed (or dictated) more by visual input rather than anything preconceived. For me, the concept is affected by the subject, and vice-versa. This may be true of you as well. If you are trying to capture "dread" you might not go shoot pics of kids playing in surf in bright midday sun. Yet that might be the most significant subject at hand, thus concept changes radically.
But your point is not for concept to rule always, just that it is a tool to stimulate ideas. I'm with you on that. I wish sometimes that I had more overarching concepts under which to group photos. I admire clear purpose when seeing photos. Then again, I'm having fun, which seems to work for now.
Love your comments. THANK YOU.
Yeah, exploration as a reason for shooting may be one of the most common reasons I hear people say they shoot, including myself. One might refer to it as PLAY; perhaps for you photography is an act of PLAY, the good old kind many of us did when we were little kids, but lost somewhere along the way.
I don't think your concept is backhanded; "pretty" is a concept, and ONLY YOU get to define it in the context of your photography. You know pretty when you see it. I think many people know a shot when they see it, but they may not know why. I was, and still am often, shooting that way. Going by gut and instinct, rather than intention.
And its also a great point to "shoot the subject at hand." Most of my personal photography, and most of that is landscape work, is simply responding to what mother nature gives me at the moment. But, I still have a degree of freedom on HOW I want to shoot the image, what I want it to convey. Sometimes it's "pretty," sometimes its something else. I actually get a charge from photography shooting this way. Its the way we shot in Kansas. Thrill of the chase, not given to rules of "twilight is the only light" for landscape photographers, or "image must be tack sharp" or so on and so on.
And absolutely, its a device and not a rule at all. I don't PLAY well surrounded by rules! Maybe that's why I like photography.
Thanks again for some provocative comments.
Cheers,
Alec
"Pretty" is a vague term. Can a rusty old saw be pretty? I'd say so, but many people don't. So be it. "Pretty" to me is almost a synonym for something interesting, something unique, or something hit by the right light.
Speaking of old saws, I like the one about knowing the rules in order to break them.