Here is a place for me to post my musings on things I have read, research I have done and photos I have taken. Hopefully by keeping this log I will improve and have a permanent record of my findings. It may even help others along the way, who knows?......................................................................................................................

Tuesday 6 September 2011

Change of plans and going forward.....

I have today made the decision that I will not do the degree course I planned, with my kids being quite young, having a full time job and renovating a house, I think I may be taking off more than I can chew. Also, I feel I have so much information available to me to teach myself both online and from books that for now that will do and I will see how I get on. Maybe tomorrow I will change my mind, but for now....................

It has been a long time since my last post,so here is a little catch up on what has been going on for me. My ankle is still quite an issue and after 5 months I still do not have full movement, the pain is now only occasional though (so at least that has improved!).

As a family we moved house to a wonderful estate that has quite a village and community feel about it, , two month in and what was going to be a shortish term move (5 years) looks like it could be a lot longer :-)

I have now finished my second 365 project, which I am so pleased about. I feel I have come a long way since 2009 when I decided to embark on my first one, but the time constraints of the 365 meant that I took a lot of photos (my Mac hard drive is testament to this, especially as I always shoot in RAW, I will explain why in my next post). Now I am just doing a dailyish photo, so the pressure is clearly off. I have just joined a group on Flickr to try and push myself a little, which gives weekly PUSHES, this involves challenges being set by other group members, we shall see how I get on. I am also fairly involved in another fantastic group on Flickr also, that gives daily themes (although I am not doing this every day), but I have found it does push me to think a little out of the box to come up with ideas for a shot. The one below was my shot yesterday for the theme of "Star", let me know what you think.

Aim for the stars by k4♥wea
Aim for the stars, a photo by k4♥wea on Flickr.
I also plan to look more on the assignments on the Digital Photography School website as again I feel this may enhance my skills further.

Until next time.....

Monday 18 April 2011

A bit of light reading

I decided to go to the library and pick up a few landscape photography books to read at the end of March, so glad I did as on 2nd April I managed to sustain a bi-malleolar fracture to my left ankle (ouch to say the least!!!).

While in hospital I started reading The Photographer's Guide to Landscapes by John Freeman which I really enjoyed and would recommend to any beginner or intermediate photographer interested in landscape photography.

This is the third volume in John Freeman's photographic series which gives advice on capturing the beauty of the world. It provides information on an exhaustive range of topics, including guidance on creating interesting foregrounds, modifying backgrounds, developing panoramas, framing, working with multiple images, and utilizing black and white as an alternative to color. Over 200 images offer perspective on capturing specific types of landscapes, from skies and deserts to waterways and urban landscapes. For me I found the advice on equipment: filters, lenses and film really interesting; technique: exposure, shutter usage; and editing: cropping and retouching. 

The book raised a point to check out on my camera : how to set the white balance to a set figure (John mentions 5,200k for sunsets), can I do this?

Further techniques mentioned that I want to look into:
1. Creating multiple images
2. Building panoramas
3. Digital composites
4. Using filters (get some ND filters and a polorizer for my wider angled lens)
5. Infrared - I have a contact on Flickr who I have admired for a while, he does quite a few shots using this style.
6. Re-touching
7. Digital toning
8. Abstracts

Eek, I there is so much I want to learn............

Friday 25 March 2011

What do you see around you?

I have been contemplating what the 365 has meant to me recently, I know that it has improved my "eye" no end and has made me "more creative" , giving me a much better eye for a photo. As with every single art form in the world, photography is practice, practice and a lot more practice., which is why a lot of people that commit to a 365 see an improvement during the year in their photos. So even if you think that you are good, try something new. As an example simply check the case of Chase Jarvis, an advertising american photographer, whose philosophy the best camera is the camera you have with you which gave rise to a book of quite artsy shots and a pretty large community of "iphone photographers".

Although I do use my iphone occasionally for a shot, I much prefer walking around with my 7D,  I realise it is much bigger, but I do like to have control in in aperture, shutter speed and exposure that it enables.

The Genius of Photography - Episode 6

Being off work with my daughter (I now know that she has Scarlett Fever, which is why she has felt so rough), I have had the chance to watch the whole series today :-)

This episode was entitled "Snap Judgments". This episode asks what a photograph is worth these days. One answer is 0.9m, the record-breaking price achieved by an Edward Steichen print auctioned at Sotheby's in February 2006. The other answer is around 1/29th billionth of that figure based on the calculation that some 29 billion photographs will be taken in 2006 by phone cameras alone. Photography has never been so valuable and so ubiquitous. From America to China and on to Africa, the programme examines how the business of being a photographer has been changed by the market's sudden interest in what was once the poor relation of the art world.

I have really enjoyed watching this, it has given me quite a few areas that I want to look further into and quite a lot of "food for thought".

The Genius of Photography - Episode 5

This episode did not catch my interest as much, mainly I think because this style of photography does not appeal to me personally as much, not that I cannot see the merit in it or the talent that these artist had, it is just not for me.

This episode was entitled "We are Family". We are Family is about what happens when photography translates personal relationships into photographic ones, when strangers, celebrities, lovers and children get fed to the camera. It's also about what happens when photographers turn their cameras on themselves—what they choose to reveal, and just what they try to conceal.


The chronological heartland of the programme is the 'me" decades of the 1970's and the 1980's. From  Diane Arbus' freaks (we meet Colin Wood, the manic boy clutching the hand grenade in Central Park) to Richard Avedon's confrontations with celebrities like Marylin Monroe, from the confessional diaries of Larry Clark and Araki, to the uncomfortably intimate family portraits of Sally Mann and Richard Billingham, the series takes a photographic journey into some of the most intriguing ideas of the photographic self, including an unforgettable encounter as Nan Golding photographs  Joey the transsexual.

The Genius of Photography - Episode 4

This episode was entitled "Paper Movies". The American photographer Garry Winogrand said that he took photographs to "see what the world looked like photographed". Photographers have always had this as their mission statement, but the three decades from the late 1950's onwards was the real golden age of the photographic journey. The Genius of Photography - Paper Movies relives the journeys that produced some of the most acclaimed paper movies. The programme takes a fascinating look at Robert Frank's odyssey through 50s America, William Klein's one-man assault on the sidewalks of New York, Gary Winogrand's charting of the human comedy in Central Park Zoo, Tony Ray Jones' dissection eccentricity at the English seaside, and finally, William Eggleston's guide to Memphis and the American South. Episode four of the series also examines the arrival of colour as a credible medium for serious photographers, as controversial at the time as Bob Dylan going electric.

This is on genre of photography that I would love to have a go at as I love the candid shots I see on social networking photo sites such a Flickr, I just do not 'yet' have the confidence to take the shots.

The Genius of Photography - Episode 3

Another good episode in m opinion, the episode was entitled "Right time, Right place". It was all about being in the right place at the right time, the decisive moment, getting in close — in the popular imagination this is photography at its best, a medium that makes us eyewitnesses to the moments when history is made. But just how good is photography at making sense of what it records? Is getting in close always better than standing back, and just how decisive are the moments that photographers risk their necks to capture? Set against the backdrop of the Second World War and its aftermath, The Genius of Photography - Right Place, Right Time examines how photographers dealt with dramatic and tragic events like D-Day, the Holocaust and Hiroshima, and the questions their often extraordinary pictures raise about history as seen through the viewfinder. It discussed the fact that although there were many photos of the atrocities in Europe, but where there was total devastation in Hiroshima far less were taken.

I found this episode very moving, mainly because of the fabulous images showing the scenes from this time. Although I have seen many photos, it seems to hit me every time, such haunting images, raw with emotion.