Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/07/25
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Hey Dan, Thanks for one of the best posts i've read for a while. Photography should be about learning: both about yourself and others. Simple concept, but a really difficult thing to implement. Take care, Gary >It _is_ rather depressing, isn't it? But I'm discovering some secrets >(which I'm sure you folks already know, but here it is from a rank >beginner): > >1. Shoot a _lot_. > >2. Experiment: change subjects, positions, perspectives, distance, exposure, >lighting, emulsions--anything and everything. > >3. Get as much feedback as possible: review the slides/prints alone and with >others so that you can learn from what you've done. > >I just followed rules 1 and 3 above, and here are four lessons I've learned >already (I must be in a list-making mood; bear with me): > >a. Rule no.2 above. This may be due to my being in "learning" mode, but it >could apply forever; there's really no substitute for experimentation. > >Having grown up (so to speak) on a zoom lens Way Back When, I've discovered >that I'm lazy about composing. My feet get stuck. I need to learn to crop >in the finder (move forward or backwards) or shift perspectives when taking >multiple shots (move laterally or vertically). > >I have also found that I tend to take multiple shots without changing >_anything_. Of course the subject is changing (expressions, positions), but >that alone isn't teaching me much. I need to start experimenting more with >bracketing, depth of field, composition, selective focus, and so on. > >b. Similar to lesson a, but specific advice on composition from my friend >Liz: "focus on what's interesting and eliminate the rest." This speaks to >the generic rule about "getting closer"--literally and figuratively (more on >the latter in lesson c). > >I found that way too many of my shots have extraneous information that's of >little or no interest: sky, street, cars, whatever. This could partly be a >process of getting accustomed to shooting with the M and using framelines (I >don't recall having so much extra space in my photos back in my SLR/zoom >days). In any event, several of my photos could be salvaged by enlarging >and cropping, which points to more effort required while composing the shot. > >c. Pay attention. > >This one's odd, and may just be me, but I've discovered (much to my chagrin) >that I'm actually a _nervous_ shooter--perhaps because I'm shooting candids >of people I don't know, and so feel shy about it (hopefully this will >dissipate over time), or because I'm already anxious about how the image >will turn out while I'm shooting it, or both. > >In any event, the effect is that I'm rushing my shots without waiting for >the decisive moment (to be fair, at times I've already missed it due to >fiddling with exposure and focus, but that occurs less frequently than >hurrying the shot), and I'm being careless about basics like depth of field >and framing. It's as though I'm in a just-shoot-and-get-away-quick mode. I >suspect that being more attentive to what I'm shooting at the moment and my >comfort level while doing so will both increase over time, and are no doubt >mutually reinforcing. > >d. Don't worry about the throw-aways (learned this thanks to the replies on >this list!). See them all as experiments to learn from, then let them go, >looking forward to the next ones.... > >This last lesson may be the most important of all. I've had to learn it >many times in many different areas of my life, but it boils down to this: if >you aren't having fun, why bother? We tend to focus on products: the final >image, the completed essay, the released software, and so on. But life is >lived in the _process_, and so, not surprisingly, the product tends to take >care of itself merely by virtue of attending to the process of creating it. >I've discovered that the product nearly always reflects the process: if I'm >not paying attention or enjoying what I'm doing, the product--regardless of >venue--ends up disappointing. > >In the end, we've only got right now to work with. All else is merely >memory or anticipation--figments of thought and imagination. Even our >photos are not captured memories but, paraphrasing Winogrand, entirely new >facts that are discovered afresh in the process of seeing them this moment. > >It's amazing how much you can learn after a few rolls through an M. :) > >Regards, >Dan _____________________________________________________________ "The difficulty now is that unexceptional adults believe the loss of youthful dreaming is itself "growing up," as though adulthood were the passive conclusion to a doomed activity and hope during adolescence." OO The Uses of Disorder [_]<| Personal Identity and City Life -- Richard Sennett /|\ Gary Elshaw Post-Grad Film Student Victoria University New Zealand http://elshaw.tripod.com/ http://elshaw.tripod.com/photointro.html _____________________________________________________________