tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-88239290037948888072024-03-13T14:16:55.218-07:00Joanna journeys with a cameraJoannahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16449827163911239893noreply@blogger.comBlogger20125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8823929003794888807.post-28806709582660560362012-08-01T08:09:00.000-07:002012-08-14T09:18:59.754-07:00Thinking about cinematography<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjskAId90EuSOt3kLhkBuOaWExXBoIow2JM4zXGimr9fzecj4aUNER9yw8F2wR8raWnuefl80P5XWsreC5HSv6462XWUmW5mLmKk4ivAl4yCF-ZExHa13cf2u_3k4JMz2sqbCdEvDv2B4A/s1600/P1010328.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="298" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjskAId90EuSOt3kLhkBuOaWExXBoIow2JM4zXGimr9fzecj4aUNER9yw8F2wR8raWnuefl80P5XWsreC5HSv6462XWUmW5mLmKk4ivAl4yCF-ZExHa13cf2u_3k4JMz2sqbCdEvDv2B4A/s400/P1010328.jpg" width="400" /></a>I haven't really paid much attention to cinematography while watching movies, except for those ones like <a href="http://www.sonyclassics.com/wingedmigration/home.html">Winged Migration</a> when it's really the subject of the film. <br />
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So it's been interesting to at least think about the cinematography as I watched an episode of Montalbano, which is an Italian detective series set in a beautiful town in Sicily. We were introduced to this series at last winter's Italian class and we were immediately taken by the feeling of Italy it communicates. <br />
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The camera work is really beautiful, pulling back to show gorgeous scenes of calm blue water with a distant swimmer (Detective Montalbano) gradually approaching the beach and then wading out of the water. Many episodes start with this type of scene and also include a lot of footage of Montalbano in his simple but gorgeous beachside apartment.</div>
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There are also many scenes of the town and the windswept coastline of Sicily. I watched part of one episode without the subtitles and it was quite surprising how much of the story I was able to understand. The camera does a good job of telling the story by following Montalbano through his days. He appears in almost every scene and the camera focuses a lot on his face and the faces of other characters. The camera also reveals the relationships between Montelbano and his group of detectives, and his superiors. </div>
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The camera work is slow and deliberate. There is a contrast between dark saturated colours for the interiors and quite high key, almost blown out exposures outdoors. And always there is the counterpoint of the beautiful turquoise ocean. It's a gorgeously filmed series--and the stories are quite complex and psychologically interesting as well. </div>
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I wasn't able to figure out how to take screen shots from the series, which can be viewed online <a href="http://www.montalbano.rai.it/dl/portali/site/page/Page-cbbaf188-90bf-4fa1-be7a-1fe00df83c42.html">here</a> (although they are in Italian). But I've illustrated this with two photos for the Pacific, one taken in California and one in Mazatlan. Both of these have a similar feeling to the beach that figures so strongly in the Montelbano series.</div>
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Joannahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16449827163911239893noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8823929003794888807.post-83561185990773148882012-07-25T12:43:00.000-07:002012-08-09T23:17:33.367-07:00Calling yourself an artist<div class="p1">
Here's a tricky subject: deciding if I am an artist or not. It's something I've struggled with since I was a child. You know how families do that thing of assigning labels to each child? My mother always said that my sister was the musical one and I was the artistic one. Funny how these labels can affect you. My sister studied piano for many years and took some of those advanced examinations and she has a lovely old piano in her home--but she hasn't played the piano (even when she's by herself) for decades. <span style="background-color: white;">As for me, I was the artistically talented one who went to art school (then dropped out), studied to be an art teacher (then dropped out), and now I have a spare room full of art supplies but I never go in there. What is it about these labels that paralyzes people?</span></div>
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I've been reading the responses from others in this class and they show me that I am not alone in responding to this question with trepidation. I've responded to some of their posts and it has got me thinking deeply about it. S<span style="background-color: white;">o, here are the questions and my responses to them.</span></div>
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<span style="color: #3d85c6;"><span style="background-color: white;">What is “art?”</span><span style="background-color: white;"> </span></span><br />
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<span style="background-color: white;">Having given it a great deal of thought I've come up with this definition: Art is a personal creative response to something that touches you in your life. The response can be through words as a poem or a description, through movement as a dance, through voice in a song or a chant, through creating music of any kind, or through visual media. </span><br />
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<span style="background-color: white;">In its narrowest sense, visual art is often thought of as paintings, sculptures and drawings--the things we would see in an art gallery. But I would also include collage, multi-media, installations, printmaking, cartoons, papier mache, and photography. It could be as simple as noticing the light on the turban squash and framing a photograph.</span><br />
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Having spent a little bit of time in the 'art world' studying painting I also know that there is a whole snobby kind of thing about 'good art' and 'bad art' and this adds to the confusion. Abstract artists dismiss realistic paintings as being less than art. Some subjects are not considered as valid as others. In Victoria there are lots of paintings of whales that are sold to tourists so any image of a whale becomes suspect. Then there are paintings that are derivative or hommages to other artists' work. Is this art? Some paintings are direct copies from a photograph or another painting. Is this art? According to my definition I would say yes to most of these. Even a copy of another painting is art because it is one person's response to something they connected with. <br />
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I've heard an African saying: If you can walk you can dance; it you can talk you can sing. This is often quoted to people who think they can't sing. It's kind of the same with art. Although there are some people who don't think they're artistic because they can't draw or use paint, they are creative in putting clothing together or setting a table or creating a garden or working with wood.<br />
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And of course photography is another way that we can use to create a personal response to something that touches us, even if it's just a momentary glimpse of a bicycle beside the lifeguard tower along the Malecon or this night shot of a pizza place in Mazatlan (which I did a watercolour painting of a couple of years ago). By this definition, it is all art.<br />
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<span style="color: #6fa8dc;">Who is an “artist?” </span></div>
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Well, here's where it gets tricky. I suppose you could say that anyone who creates art is an artist. But I find that "artist" is a really loaded word. Most people I know who work in the visual arts don't call themselves artists. They will say they 'make art' or 'do art' or they 'work in visual art' or 'make paintings' or something like that. And these are people who are passionate creators of art and who often sell their work. <br />
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The media likes to anoint people as "artists" whether they work with fabric or paint colours or magic shows or just about anything else. If you work in the commercial field you can call yourself a graphic artist and that seems to be ok. And someone very famous who makes a living from art like Robert Bateman can call himself an artist. But the rest of us don't.<br />
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<span style="color: #3d85c6;">What is the role of art and artists in your life and in society as a whole?</span><br />
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Oh boy, the role of art? Well maybe it's to share individual responses with others in the world. Society puts it on a pedestal and the media (and even the government) has its own take. This is pretty complicated and I don't think I want to get into all of that just now. </div>
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<span style="color: #3d85c6;">Do you enjoy art and creativity? Are you an observer or a practitioner?</span><br />
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I am both an observer and a practitioner. I love colour, shape, form, and composition. I love looking at paintings and thinking about painting. (You'll notice I didn't say I love painting--although I do. I'm still kind of blocked with painting but I'm thinking of taking some of my photographs and using them as a basis for some kind of abstract acrylic paintings.) <span style="background-color: white;">I love looking at photographs and taking photographs. I find the camera so quick and easy compared to creating a painting that I have stepped away from drawing and painting for now. </span></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjxFdqiypicard3muf5jC36oXnAvQxan4YseGFtZrXKfygHvjUX26Bj52sWGqGXOYPkO63VJiVKRV5JqECuycMk6tt0gHxWl0F9jC36pG9UibT0H0TxpJMvsAygdObQmv_rJPayGGU3LmQ/s1600/IMG_1823.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="400" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjxFdqiypicard3muf5jC36oXnAvQxan4YseGFtZrXKfygHvjUX26Bj52sWGqGXOYPkO63VJiVKRV5JqECuycMk6tt0gHxWl0F9jC36pG9UibT0H0TxpJMvsAygdObQmv_rJPayGGU3LmQ/s400/IMG_1823.jpg" width="287" /></a><span style="color: #3d85c6;"><span style="background-color: white;">Is photography art? Why or why not?</span><span style="background-color: white;"> </span></span><br />
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Photography can be art but it isn't always. Lots of people take snapshots of events and holidays but they're just recording something rather than making a personal creative response. Just pointing a camera at something and clicking the shutter doesn't make you an artist or a photographer. <span style="background-color: white;"> Like any art, photography is complex and demands study and practice. To make photography art, we have to work to control the medium so it can clearly communicate the way we respond to and see this amazing world we live in. </span><br />
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<span style="background-color: white;">I am so drawn to the tiny flowers and I have taken so many images that are not unique in any way, but i still love to look at the small details like the veining in this arugula flower or the shadows on the hydrangea petals.</span><br />
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<span style="background-color: white; color: #3d85c6;">Are you an artist? Why or why not? </span><br />
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Like most of the others in Kat's course I struggle with calling myself an artist. <span style="background-color: white;">I think most of us shy away from calling ourselves artists because of that. It sounds a bit show-offy. But that doesn't mean I don't think of myself as a person who creates personal visual responses to things that I see in my life. </span><br />
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<span style="background-color: white;">As I said, I think that if we make images that evoke an emotional response then we are creating art. The question then becomes whether the image speaks to others. It's nice to think that some of them can communicate the essence of my vision at that moment. I do like to post a few photographs on the internet and it's nice to have some positive feedback. I'm thinking that I'd like to create some little notecards with some of the images that I've taken so I could use them for gifts. </span><br />
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<span style="background-color: white;">But I have no desire to show my photographs because really for me it's the process that I love: getting lost in the moment of capturing the beauty and strangeness I see on this journey through life. It's a kind of meditation for me. </span><span style="background-color: white;">Thank you Kat for creating a process to help us find ourselves as artists in this world.</span><br />
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<br />Joannahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16449827163911239893noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8823929003794888807.post-43284931946099144942012-07-22T13:06:00.000-07:002012-07-22T13:11:36.934-07:00Exploring point of view<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhfce-ZIRZglgrkDifXYufBuKfS_-bcWQ-zF1l5IsZ-ShXHksHpgBTtrjjY7FlZnxVpSxuPWGIsT-TwewHYAVQ5V0dATw8g6Nuz0zSnDyxv5tvqR09BkqASSsoEjP9EPGuWSYr5URWQkoM/s1600/IMG_2877.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhfce-ZIRZglgrkDifXYufBuKfS_-bcWQ-zF1l5IsZ-ShXHksHpgBTtrjjY7FlZnxVpSxuPWGIsT-TwewHYAVQ5V0dATw8g6Nuz0zSnDyxv5tvqR09BkqASSsoEjP9EPGuWSYr5URWQkoM/s320/IMG_2877.jpg" width="240" /></a>The assignment is to pick a subject and go beyond the usual point of view. It's true in photography (as in life) that we do have al habitual point of view. Mine does vary depending on the subject but often I'm looking straight at something or else close up to it at eye level. <br />
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For this exercise I chose the huge arbutus tree in my front yard as my subject. It's an old giant of a tree, probably well over 100 feet in height and I see it every morning from my bedroom window. In fact I've taken a good many photographs of this tree over the years as I'm often drawn to the gorgeous colour of sunlight on its branches. Here's the standard POV; it's pretty much what I see out the window. (Yes it's just one tree.)<br />
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But this time I was looking for some other ways to capture the tree. The light wasn't exceptional but I headed out and took about 100 photos trying to push the point-of-view envelope. <br />
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<span style="background-color: white;">The first thing I did was cross the road to shoot from a new angle. I found this point of view somewhat alarming, as it shows just how huge this tree is compared to our little house. Occasionally we wonder what it would be like to have this tree come down across our roof or driveway. You can see that we wouldn't stand a chance!</span><br />
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<span style="background-color: white;">Looking up into the branches from this side gave some nice results with a cedar tree in the background. </span><br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjW0XWUeZjI8gLyrKfoLg8WHBb0n014OVUBg7ALcnz6NDsYXnqjsz3dDNtpW5U9TrMdEjvJ-JF9ZZAZuQ01SAY3Q0V_DK9RIO0y3wQ_RYKNicdkazDyJuUqSPu_OGH2WQckVnXiH62bQp0/s1600/IMG_3118.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="345" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjW0XWUeZjI8gLyrKfoLg8WHBb0n014OVUBg7ALcnz6NDsYXnqjsz3dDNtpW5U9TrMdEjvJ-JF9ZZAZuQ01SAY3Q0V_DK9RIO0y3wQ_RYKNicdkazDyJuUqSPu_OGH2WQckVnXiH62bQp0/s400/IMG_3118.jpg" width="400" /></a><span style="background-color: white; text-align: left;">This one shows the beautiful orange and green undertones of the smooth bark and the one below shows the contrast with rough shagginess of the peeling bark. </span></div>
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Then I went in closer, leaning up against the trunk and looking straight up into the branches. I like the way this shows both the ivy on the trunk and leafy branch far above.<br />
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And this misty shot really shows that is it a forest giant.</div>
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Finally I did some macros of the bark and other details. I'm not sure why I've never thought to do this before.<br />
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I thought I'd finished my exploration of the points of view yesterday but just after I pulled this post together this morning we took the dogs out and on the way back I took another look at the tree.... and had to run in to get my camera. The sun was showing more of the gorgeous red and yellow tones and I was seeing it in an entirely new way, yet again.<br />
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This time I took fifty shots and I really feel that I got into the spirit of this incredible tree. <br />
Here are my favourites: Two looking way up... <br />
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Two quite sharp macros showing the peeling bark....</div>
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And this one showing the lovely shading and colours in the smooth bark with the bonus leaf shadows.</div>
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<span style="background-color: white;">I think that this morning's discoveries wouldn't have happened without my spending an hour with the tree yesterday. Amazing how it builds and builds.</span>Joannahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16449827163911239893noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8823929003794888807.post-51057784901641263422012-07-18T07:53:00.000-07:002012-07-18T08:00:24.971-07:00Do I have a shooting style?Today I'm thinking about how I take photographs, or what Kat calls my shooting style. For me the equipment part is pretty simple as I just use my Canon G12 which fits into a little black purse that I carry with me everywhere. No additional lenses, bags or tripod. This make it pretty easy for me to capture things I see while out and about. There's a part of me that would like to try using different lenses and filters but I think I need a lot more time just using the camera I have before stepping over that threshold. <br />
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I'm still learning to use the modes of this camera and I usually shoot in the program mode or the aperture priority mode because I often use the macro setting and like to have the background out of focus. Also I am more and more using exposure compensation and the histogram. I'm beginning to push myself to do more experimenting with camera modes, depending on the situation. <br />
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I love natural light, especially the late afternoon and evening sun. I'm very fond of things that are back-lit, especially flowers and growing things. I'm also drawn to long shadows and spots of brilliant colour.<br />
<span style="background-color: white;">That's not to say I don't also like monochromatic views and rainy days. (The three photos here were taken after a heavy rain in my back yard.)</span><br />
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Pretty well all aspects of natural light are inspiring to me. My response to light is intuitive. I've always been aware of colours and shadows and glowing light and I love to attempt to capture it with my camera. There's still a lot to learn here.<br />
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<span style="background-color: white;">As for location, the world around me is what inspires me, whether I'm walking to the library or exploring a Mexican village. I find I'm often more excited when I'm in a new place, but if the light is glowing on a tree outside the grocery store I'll be inspired too. Although I'll bring my camera to a party and take a few photos, these are not what get my photographic juices going.</span><br />
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<span style="background-color: white;">I usually bring my camera with me everywhere I go--and sometimes I'll even use it to take a photograph or two. But my preference is to take some time alone to go out alone with my camera and really explore a subject in more detail. Often when I'm with another person feel constrained or hurried and just end up grabbing a couple of shots when I know there is much more to be explored. I think that for me to develop my photography I need to be more deliberate about this. If I create the time I can do the experimenting with settings get into the deeper meditative flow with my subject. Also to really study and learn about light and exposures and focal length by doing it consciously.</span><br />
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<br />Joannahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16449827163911239893noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8823929003794888807.post-55882227671467111282012-07-13T18:06:00.003-07:002012-07-16T09:41:54.096-07:00Walking without the cameraOur assignment was to take a walk somewhere without the camera and journal what we experienced. For me this was not really new as I often head out the door for a walk with the dogs and leave the camera behind. Those are usually the times, of course, when I see something I really want to capture. When that happens I just mentally click it in my mind and add it to my mental image file. It's pretty full actually...and it's not nearly as easy to review as the photos on my computer! But to me, just seeing the image can sometimes be enough.<br />
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<span style="background-color: white;">For today's walk I left the dogs at home and went to a place I've always wanted to visit--a nature sanctuary where dogs aren't allowed. Most of the time when I'm out in nature I have the dogs with me and it's quite different walking without the dogs. It's so relaxing. Rithet's Bog is the last remaining peat bog in our area. Like many wetlands, it's home to a wide variety of birds and butterflies. I walked the trail part way around it and found it so peaceful to watch the songbirds and the butterflies without thinking that I should try to take photos of them.</span></div>
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I found that my other senses were more heightened on this walk. I was hearing the songs of the birds and the sound of running water and the wind in the trees. Also I found I looked up more and saw more of the sky. (This photo is form my archives and shows a bit of what I saw.)</div>
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There was one spot where I really would have loved to stop and take some pictures. It was a little brown creek that ran into a tiny waterfall with beautiful reflections. </div>
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Now that I've seen this place I will go back there with my camera--and without the dogs (and the husband). He's pretty accommodating but it's always better to take the time myself and not feel pressured. </div>
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</div>Joannahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16449827163911239893noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8823929003794888807.post-41436492833126380762012-07-11T09:50:00.001-07:002012-07-11T15:04:24.679-07:00Solving focus problemsContinuing along with my photographic explorations, I'm taking another session of Kat's online courses. This one is the Journey of Inspiration. The first lesson is to think about how I solved a photography problem in the past and how that learning might apply to current problems I'm facing. <br />
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I'm finding this assignment tough because it's not really my nature to be so analytical --<span style="background-color: white;"> but in thinking about it I am remembering a couple of years ago with my old Lumix point-and-shoot I couldn't seem to find the way to focus my macro shots. I'm obsessed with closeups of flowers (like just about everyone else who has a camera it seems) and I wanted to get in as close as I could with sharp focus. It seems obvious now but I hadn't connected the little green square in the middle of the image as showing what was in focus. Reviewing my camera manual was what finally helped me make this connection. When I did,</span><span style="background-color: white;"> everything opened up for me and I was able to take images like these two where there's a shallow depth of field and the focus is on one detail. </span><br />
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I'm still working with a point-and-shoot camera; now it's a Canon G12. I chose this because it's got just about all the functions of a DSLR but isn't as bulky. However I am still finding it difficult to get the autofocus to set on what I want. <br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgW88NPSUHu7IqmV6goMr5HJbaqmR1UmqehkGx5kwW1BliwfOxUIz9UYvhDjNg0ZZmIQ9nRwinoAJUwfXA9oeDI55ebgsFpx3ZYxZyiuim4s00bpzKxmINfYxfrsofvVo6D9cSG5caQFic/s1600/IMG_2819.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="400" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgW88NPSUHu7IqmV6goMr5HJbaqmR1UmqehkGx5kwW1BliwfOxUIz9UYvhDjNg0ZZmIQ9nRwinoAJUwfXA9oeDI55ebgsFpx3ZYxZyiuim4s00bpzKxmINfYxfrsofvVo6D9cSG5caQFic/s400/IMG_2819.jpg" width="300" /></a>Look at this photo taken just this weekend. I was trying to focus on the two ladybugs on the grass stem but no matter how many times I refocused the camera kept focusing on the rocks in behind. After several attempts I gave up. I know that if I had the time to persist and spend maybe half an hour working with this I would have managed to get something better than this--but then the bus came and we had to leave for the folk music festival. <br />
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Part of the problem was that I didn't have the time to spend on it. But maybe it's time to go back to my camera manual. I know there are other focusing options that I need to review.<br />
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<br />Joannahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16449827163911239893noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8823929003794888807.post-56731281437902800902012-06-19T22:38:00.000-07:002012-06-19T22:38:16.332-07:00Poppies<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiX71UeK8OQ_ywuZ8PCLAu7XGh0p-8UBrnYpZcbgwhoUHxEdgfYpiHSvbX2qlnh8r9jN5ZxtZprvvNMYu0DjzhkxQdj2kIR3X_m9BN0dAVpPzzQfUFGerIf6pVgXvCjr6o7-ppFhTZWcgM/s1600/IMG_2513.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="640" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiX71UeK8OQ_ywuZ8PCLAu7XGh0p-8UBrnYpZcbgwhoUHxEdgfYpiHSvbX2qlnh8r9jN5ZxtZprvvNMYu0DjzhkxQdj2kIR3X_m9BN0dAVpPzzQfUFGerIf6pVgXvCjr6o7-ppFhTZWcgM/s640/IMG_2513.jpg" width="480" /></a></div>
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Poppies in a pot on the outdoor table in my friend's back yard. Something dreamy about the out-of-focus bamboo in the background and the backlighted hairs on the stems. I like the light in this photograph.<br />
<br />Joannahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16449827163911239893noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8823929003794888807.post-36102050225833942112012-02-25T20:10:00.001-08:002012-02-25T20:13:30.186-08:00Putting it all together<br />
I'm sad that the Journey of Recognition course is over! I've enjoyed every moment of the assignments and I will miss the regular connection with Kat and with others who are taking these steps to self discovery with a camera. I've discovered some personal signposts on the road to finding my unique photographic eye. For the final review I've just re-read my photo-journal entries and I see that I have taken some steps along this road.<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEit_J6BuQElSnq8d-tMOMbL9CB9Ge6vSzKzPsMz6_0GnOHBLE2-duxlAFwo2LF0jPMxwuT7kIvB1npE_NLp5GvjnvARbdCEV2VrQ2aPml-AiMI28dnBGdTrJ2YwTcGrvBgs5k2f-dk3hkk/s1600/IMG_5772.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="480" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEit_J6BuQElSnq8d-tMOMbL9CB9Ge6vSzKzPsMz6_0GnOHBLE2-duxlAFwo2LF0jPMxwuT7kIvB1npE_NLp5GvjnvARbdCEV2VrQ2aPml-AiMI28dnBGdTrJ2YwTcGrvBgs5k2f-dk3hkk/s640/IMG_5772.jpg" width="640" /></a></div>
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A big step for me was recognizing that the subject mater of my photographs is irrelevant. I can point my camera at just about anything and find something that I like to look at. I recognize now that anything I have an emotional or visual connection with is worthwhile. For me the connection with my subject is the touchstone for all my journeys with the camera. Once I see something that I connect with I can either absorb it into my visual memory bank or capture it with my camera. If I have my camera with me I now know how important it is to take the time to get deep into the subject, to take the 150 images to find two or three that really resonate for me.<br />
<br />
I've loved reading the words of other photographers. Some of them have helped me clarify my own process. Kathy Lieb said that taking photos helps us connect with our world. This is so true. 23 June quoted an artist I'd never heard of before, Alvaro Castanet, who does incredible abstracted water colours. He says that you start a painting at the moment you look at the subject. I totally get it and it applies to photography too. Bev<span id="bc_0_1b+seedHwj4D" kind="d"></span>erly at Lavender Blue talks about the relaxed calm feeling or the surge of excitement when you click the shutter. I feel this sometimes too and it tells me that I am being true to my own vision, being in the flow.<br />
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This is what I love; this is why I take photographs. I've also been re-inspired to translate some of the images into water colours to get even deeper into them.<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhJbP4x-O4WZtF8QQcqSHxQK4nebmxe2oqm5R8I3cy7tzG3u5v28SYId0bI7RWo0btWT1-q3SvU0Q1dv0VsM8oCQ3K4Pfpx9DNkhyphenhyphenClhyFwaSoVNYaW2-RNLJPOali97M1J9yPZ7bLxTZM/s1600/IMG_3930.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="480" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhJbP4x-O4WZtF8QQcqSHxQK4nebmxe2oqm5R8I3cy7tzG3u5v28SYId0bI7RWo0btWT1-q3SvU0Q1dv0VsM8oCQ3K4Pfpx9DNkhyphenhyphenClhyFwaSoVNYaW2-RNLJPOali97M1J9yPZ7bLxTZM/s640/IMG_3930.jpg" width="640" /></a></div>
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So, what next? Well, I have begun the process of learning about my camera, how to vary exposure and use different apertures and shutter speeds to get the image to show what I see. I have a long way to go with this as there is so much to learn. But I am glad that I have started first on the road to finding my own eye, with feeling confident about capturing the image that speaks to me. Perhaps it will speak to others, perhaps not. In the end it doesn't really matter. It's the connection with the subject that is the key for me. <br />
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Thank you Kat and all my classmates for making this a true journey of inspiration.<br />
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<br />Joannahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16449827163911239893noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8823929003794888807.post-70959388011502196122012-02-24T15:18:00.002-08:002012-02-24T15:28:29.703-08:00Trends and Photography<style>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiKyN4tiy8EZ_Psy4maco6vFdl3j83GkHiKzYj-lNevIn9qsrDfLI-ul2xG5a0Pz7cEWq6gFL1IB1HEMacbAeCq2tCoMrTIvnX4zK9yYKXj0NeSflS5J1koXx3v9rVKnLddEC_KBpjhil0/s1600/IMG_8456.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="278" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiKyN4tiy8EZ_Psy4maco6vFdl3j83GkHiKzYj-lNevIn9qsrDfLI-ul2xG5a0Pz7cEWq6gFL1IB1HEMacbAeCq2tCoMrTIvnX4zK9yYKXj0NeSflS5J1koXx3v9rVKnLddEC_KBpjhil0/s400/IMG_8456.jpg" width="400" /></a>The latest assignment is to explore trends in a particular
genre of photography using websites or other resources, then take a look at my
inspiration file to see if there are any elements of these current trends and
analyze how they may be influencing me. What an interesting process this will
be, but it will have to wait until I am back home from my road trip, since I
just don’t have easy internet access.</div>
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Like some others who have already posted on this topic, I am
aware of some trends that arise out of photo editing programs. I’m thinking of textures and layers and
the holga lens effect. While I
enjoy seeing texture and layers in others’ photos, I really haven’t explored
them myself. It takes some effort
to master to layering in Photoshop Elements, which is the program I have, but
it’s also at home and not on the laptop that I’m using while we’re on the road.</div>
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I find the holga lens very interesting with its moody fade
out and darkening around the edges. I’d like to see how some of my photos look
with this effect. And I will try
it once I’m home and have access to my photo editing program. I also notice that there’s a lot of
bokeh around even in TV series and I’m attracted to that and would like to be
able to master this effect. </div>
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It seems to me that we’re all influenced by trends in
imagery, to some extent. We’re surrounded by so many visuals—on TV,
internet, billboards, magazines, etc.
I enjoy looking at photographs of home décor and food and I see definite trends in this genre. Also, landscape photography has moved away from what I think
of as the classic “Ansel Adams” approach, although some photographers are
returning to black and white and even using the big field cameras again to
recreate that look. </div>
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There are so many approaches and I am grateful that Kat has
suggested this exercise to show a possible way through the forest of trends to
find my own eye. </div>
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The blue highway at the top was taken from the car window after a storm
in Nebraska. The church below is actually one in Taos that Ansel Adams
photographed. I don’t think he had
any tree shadows in his, though. </div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiG0y4G7VP3BY-llO0iNQV08fguKf5xWmzgFQYhfa3ehxJxKouexd5RmiULQIC-J-RuIyW_V4QCJpy3FLme45nlu4-EgrpXgmEzEeKk5N8LHAZiYfdiAtVNBWGA0ZFmsXwBIRI7XXLaego/s1600/IMGP0838.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="640" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiG0y4G7VP3BY-llO0iNQV08fguKf5xWmzgFQYhfa3ehxJxKouexd5RmiULQIC-J-RuIyW_V4QCJpy3FLme45nlu4-EgrpXgmEzEeKk5N8LHAZiYfdiAtVNBWGA0ZFmsXwBIRI7XXLaego/s640/IMGP0838.jpg" width="480" /></a></div>
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This last one is from our recent trip to Tumacacori, an
abandoned mission in Arizona. I
discovered the bokeh circles when I looked at it on my computer. I have no idea how they got there, but
I think they add a little mystery to the image. Clearly I will have to find out more about creating this
look. </div>
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<br /></div>Joannahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16449827163911239893noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8823929003794888807.post-3187824795151673062012-02-20T17:44:00.000-08:002012-02-20T18:10:27.196-08:00Beneath the surface<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjDC0STkDk9ISYc2Qadsx8SJNu6UWClBVUC1VSPjGL8Ky2g_Iq0B-b0D-3KgQNesu5KG9LCZRDapZHTcl-7xFkLJnLc5G5kcirm2iYPmPT1WPpidX2FMmO3sgzEs04iRmzw8we2dOuRwuY/s1600/IMG_2080.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="436" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjDC0STkDk9ISYc2Qadsx8SJNu6UWClBVUC1VSPjGL8Ky2g_Iq0B-b0D-3KgQNesu5KG9LCZRDapZHTcl-7xFkLJnLc5G5kcirm2iYPmPT1WPpidX2FMmO3sgzEs04iRmzw8we2dOuRwuY/s640/IMG_2080.jpg" width="640" /></a></div>
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I chose this photo from my inspiration file for today's exercise--to write about what comes up for me with this image. I remember taking it from along the walk beside a river in the fall and loving the reflections of the autumn trees in the green river. And it is pretty with the colours at the top that are like an abstract painting. But if it was only the top half of the image, the surface without the depth, it wouldn't have the impact for me.<br />
<br />
When I look at it and allow myself to be absorbed in the image, it speaks to me of dimensions, of the glimmering surface and of looking deeper. Often in our lives we're entranced by the surface colours and the gleam. These surface things bring pleasure, of course they do. But without the depth of the running water and the shape and solidity of the rocks deeper down, we're just floating on the surface of life. This photograph speaks to me of being whole, being connected to our deepest purpose--and at the same time reflecting the joy in universe and flowing with it.<br />
<br />
In reflecting on this intuitive photo journaling process I have to say that I found it difficult. I felt I was getting way too metaphysical or preachy. I did feel a bit pressured to find meaning in a photograph. This one is maybe too symbolic for the purpose. And yet--I do know that we all have many dimensions that together make us whole.Joannahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16449827163911239893noreply@blogger.com11tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8823929003794888807.post-89494695592571485422012-02-17T20:59:00.000-08:002012-02-17T21:09:02.817-08:00Blue light<style>
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<span style="font-family: Calibri;">Our recent assignment was to do a photo shoot
in a new light. Looking at my
inspiration file it became clear that the golden light of daylight and sunset
was my preference so I decided to work with the blue light of very early
morning. It’s not that I don’t like blue; in fact it’s probably one of my
favorite colors, but it doesn’t show up often in my preferred images. </span><br />
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<span style="font-family: Calibri;">We were camped at a lovely lake on the
Colorado River so I got up well before sunrise on Thursday morning to see what
I could come up with. I walked
around the lakefront for an hour or more freezing my fingers off but finding
myself entranced with the silvery blue light. I tried using my camera’s low light setting and also
adjusting the exposures to see what worked best. Some of the images were nice but too grainy for my
taste. I came up with a few that I
really liked. </span><br />
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<span style="font-family: Calibri;">During the photo session I found was really
interested in the early pre-dawn light with the silhouettes. At this point I was focusing more on
landscape images. Then as the sky brightened and things became more
recognizable I defaulted to my familiar macro mode. </span></div>
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<span style="font-family: Calibri;">I found that I was more interested than usual
in playing around with these images in my computer to make them have more
contrast and saturation and get away from such a monochromatic look. All of these images have been
adjusted--but they’re all still
very blue.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: Calibri;"> </span><span style="font-family: Calibri;">At the end of the time (before my fingers
became icicles) I was lucky enough to see a beautiful egret fly into the
reeds. This was a treat and I
tried to capture him without too much success, as I don’t have much of a
telephoto lens. But as he flew
away I was able to get this last image, which I’m pleased with too. It also has undertones of blue. </span></div>
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<span style="font-family: Calibri;">I actually like some of these photos better
than the ones I took when we first arrived in the afternoon. They have an entirely different
mood. This was an interesting
exercise working in a new light and I’m going to try to push myself into other areas
of unexplored light.</span><br />
<br />
<span style="font-family: Calibri;">I'm sorry that I haven't been able to visit as many posts by other people in the class. My internet access has been spotty so it's been tough to to get to all of them. In time I'll do so and comment as I find this is an important element of the learning. </span><br />
<span style="font-family: Calibri;"> </span></div>Joannahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16449827163911239893noreply@blogger.com13tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8823929003794888807.post-22591271126273651182012-02-13T02:39:00.000-08:002012-07-25T13:26:34.206-07:00Seeing the image<style>
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This week's assignment in the online class has me thinking about what aspect of
the photographic process inspires me most. Kat has broken it down into nine categories from the
intention to photograph through to receiving feedback. I have to say that her analytic
approach is very helpful to me because I’m not really one to analyze my
process. </div>
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Looking closely at it, I think for me the most exciting part is
seeing a subject and exploring it with the camera. Sometimes it doesn’t even matter if I actually take a
photo. </div>
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I’m remembering a trip we
took to Greece way back in 1987 and seeing fields of stunning red poppies. At that time I had a little tourist
point-and-shoot camera and I wasn’t able to capture the images I saw because
they were mostly out of the car window.
One memorable day we rented a motor scooter and I rode behind my husband
through the flower-studded hills.
On one turn of the road the most gorgeous meadow was revealed and I managed to get him to stop so I could take a picture. But my
camera had run out of film and I didn’t get the shot.</div>
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I still have a memory of that field of poppies and last year
when we traveled to Italy in June when the poppies were in bloom I was
searching for it again. I’ve never
yet been able to find the image that I saw that day, although it remains in my
head (or maybe my heart). I did find a little painting
done by an Italian artist that had the essence of the field and I bought a
reproduction of it. I’ve tried
many times to catch the feeling of the poppy meadow and I still continue to be
inspired by wild flowers in a field. </div>
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I’m also remembering another time a couple of years ago when
were exploring an old walled cemetery at a hacienda in Mexico. An ancient woman with a long white braid and two beautiful children in traditional colorful clothing were placing bunches of flowers on a grave. Much as I would have loved to take some
photographs of them I just couldn’t interfere in that solemn moment. Even from a distance it would have been
seriously disrespectful. But I
have a memory of the solemnity and the color and the feeling of that brief time
in the graveyard. And I’m still
inspired by headstones and flowers.<br />
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This photo was taken in the same graveyard and these roses and marigolds hold some of the mood of that memory. </div>
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Now that I have a digital camera I try to take it with me
everywhere because I never know when I’ll see something that inspires me. It could be the light through a leaf or the colors in a patch of moss or the sun slanting on the hills. Lots of times when I’m out walking with
the dogs I leave the camera at home because it’s too complicated to stop and take
photos when it’s their time to walk and play. And I still see things that I would like to photograph. Sometimes I tell myself that I’ll go
back and take the picture, but so far I haven’t done so. It seems to be enough
just to recognize that I’ve seen the image as I walked by.<br />
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Of course I love to take the photograph and I really enjoy reviewing and cropping them and seeing how they look on my blog. But for me the most inspiring thing about the photographic process is seeing the image and trying to find a way to capture its essence with the camera. I know I'm in the flow when I find myself lying on the ground trying to get the light coming through the petals of the poppy.</div>
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<br /></div>Joannahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16449827163911239893noreply@blogger.com12tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8823929003794888807.post-24000234315881725292012-02-10T18:25:00.000-08:002012-02-10T20:32:41.090-08:00An unfamiliar subject -- the motorhome<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhDWxrZ0wFw2qqXCGR6kxW0vZrBZ7sWcyjP6M6l2JNgoqSaoZBezR66X4C5BBeOVPQ_V4fcDUqJ0-NirP18zL661jiZ3c7p3T03YqGvviYwbQwH949lY2G1ACqOXVBKqRHxCIUms3Pvxaw/s1600/IMG_7418.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhDWxrZ0wFw2qqXCGR6kxW0vZrBZ7sWcyjP6M6l2JNgoqSaoZBezR66X4C5BBeOVPQ_V4fcDUqJ0-NirP18zL661jiZ3c7p3T03YqGvviYwbQwH949lY2G1ACqOXVBKqRHxCIUms3Pvxaw/s320/IMG_7418.jpg" width="248" /></a>Our latest assignment is to do a photo shoot with an unfamiliar subject, something that we wouldn't normally photograph. Since I generally have nature as my subject I was looking for something man made. I spent some time shooting an old house beside the service station in Grant's Pass where we were getting a little repair done on the motor home. That was fun, but I realized that taking pictures of old houses is something I've done quite often so I decided on a really different subject for me.<br />
<br />
So yesterday I pointed my camera at the motor home. We've had this old vehicle for about ten years and have done quite a bit of traveling with it. But up to now the only photos I've ever taken of it were the kind like this one where it's posed in front of some scenery on the road (here on the main street of Mount Shasta).<br />
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The idea of using the motorhome as a subject was entirely new to
me. I began with the inside, taking photos as we drove down the
Interstate 5 in northern California. I took about fifty photos and
found myself drawn by reflections in the mirrors of the landscape
outside and then as I got further into it, closeups of the hardware. I kind of like the colours in this one of the latch on the "no-draft"
window, something that cars haven't had since the early 1908s.<br />
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Then this morning I really hit my stride, when I went outside to take pictures. It was a softly overcast day with some drizzle but that didn't deter me. This time I took 130 images. As I moved closer and closer in I was completely absorbed by the abstract images I was seeing through my viewfinder. It surprised me that I wasn't even seeing it as a vehicle anymore. Just as a way to finding abstract designs. I've realized that it actually doesn't matter what subject I select, I can find things that draw my eye.<br />
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Starting with relfections of trees in the upper window. (Of course I would be drawn to the tree silhouettes.)<br />
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Then again I got mesmerized by reflections and abstractions. There water droplets everywhere and the chrome reflected the colours in the poncho I was wearing. I really like the images where you can't tell what it is you're looking at. <br />
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This one reminds me of a kind of creepy smile showing rotten teeth! </div>
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These last two are more recognizable. The first is the door handle and the next part of the side mirror. I like the reflections here too and the limited colour scheme.<br />
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What did I discover? First that I love abstraction and reflections. Also I'm drawn to limited colour palettes. But most of all, I discovered that I can find these things in almost any subject. <br />
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<br />Joannahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16449827163911239893noreply@blogger.com15tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8823929003794888807.post-43634910935341324772012-02-05T16:08:00.000-08:002012-02-05T17:19:33.487-08:00Gallery influencesI didn't give this assignment as much time as I would have liked because we're getting ready for a road trip in our camper, leaving tomorrow. But I did pop into a commercial gallery here that I haven't been to before. It had a variety of work from big abstracts to landscapes, to cheery contemporary charming paintings to small still life paintings. Several things drew my eye. Big soft abstracty landscapes, some quite subtle. I didn't like the abstracts with red and black and white but the one in softer earthy tones really spoke to me. (This photo was taken of a concrete wall in Mexico. I have dozens of these "wall photos" but my favorites are the ones that look like soft abstracts.)<br />
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I also like the wall size abstracts in deep earthy red, gold, oranges and blue with lots of texture contrasted with smoother areas. These paintings made me want to head straight home and get out my big brushes.<br />
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The one that really sits in my mind though is a small still life of a yellow pitcher sitting on a shelf in a beam of sunlight. Rich and soft and simple with colours similar to this photo of my favourite coffee cup. This kind lighting really pleases me. </div>
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I also liked some of the smaller paintings in acrylic of still life scenes with fruit, flowers, tablecloths etc. Very simple subjects handled in a variety of styles. </div>
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I admire the way painters can make things soft and blurry or sharp and hard-edged. With the camera we don't have quite that flexibility. Although sometimes mist and shadows can help achieve that.<br />
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I've loved going through galleries for many years so this isn't new to me but as I walked out the door I was reminded of the very best thing about seeing art in a gallery. As soon as you step out the door your eye sees paintings everywhere. Right around the corner was a weeping tree with buds and the shadows showing sharp against a soft coral wall. Just beautiful. If only I'd had my camera with me.<br />
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</div>Joannahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16449827163911239893noreply@blogger.com14tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8823929003794888807.post-12379440607901325902012-01-30T22:42:00.000-08:002012-01-30T23:16:38.010-08:00The rule that held me back<br />
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This week we’re looking at rules and seeing whether we’ve
absorbed some that are holding us back.
Thinking of this has been quite revealing for me. I don’t have a lot of “shoulds” or
“shouldn’ts” about composition or settings. But when it comes to subject matter there is one big
constraint. All my creative efforts have been constrained (and at times crippled) by the rule that the subject has to be important or relevant. The question the trips
me up time after time is this one: What is a worthy subject?</div>
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When I was a teenager I went through a phase where I was
concerned about the worthiness of my conversation. I decided I didn’t want to participate in small talk and I
would only speak when the subject was relevant and worthwhile. Needless to day, there wasn’t much to
talk about most of the time! </div>
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Later on when I took on the study of painting I ran into the
same dilemma. I couldn’t paint
just any old thing. I had to find
a worthwhile subject. Still life? Too many people did that! Landscapes? Boring. Portraits? Too conventional. You see where this is leading, I’m
sure. I was unable to choose an
appropriate and worthwhile subject for my artwork. For a time I did abstract art but even that was tough
because I kept finding reality creeping in. This rule had the effect of stopping me from painting for
many years.<br />
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I’ve tried to see where this came from and I think part is
from my extreme self-consciousness as a child and part from a sense that I
needed to be unique. My mother always encouraged me to be a little bit
different and somehow I took it way too much to heart. I felt that the only worthwhile things
to do were things that nobody else had ever done. When it comes to subject
matter in artwork of any kind, that’s a recipe for paralysis.</div>
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Photography is turning out be a way out of this box for
me. I can use the camera to snap a
photo of something that catches my eye.
It doesn’t have to be a worthy subject—just something I see and like. </div>
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This photograph is an example. It’s a plastic wine glass on the bathroom windowsill. The subject is mundane but something
drew my eye and so I went for my camera and took a picture of it. It's very exciting for me to be finding my way beyond my self-imposed rule about relevant subject matter. </div>
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<br /></div>Joannahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16449827163911239893noreply@blogger.com9tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8823929003794888807.post-34943076907711040692012-01-18T22:18:00.000-08:002012-01-18T22:23:58.696-08:00It's about the lightEarlier this week I collected some of my favorite photographs into an Inspiration File. This will be something we work on over the next few months in the <a href="http://kateyestudio.com/online-courses/find-your-eye-photo-courses">Find Your Eye course</a>. The task was to come up with a collection of 15 to 20 photos that are our favorites, that make us feel something, photos that we like to go back and look at. I ended up with a lot more than 20. In fact I had over 80 photographs, but I've now reduced that number to 44. <br />
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In reviewing these photos I jotted down some words about what I saw in the photos that I liked. <br />
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light texture shadows<br />
color contrast negative space pattern<br />
reflections tension shimmer<br />
diagonals depth drama<br />
sharp focus mood<br />
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Maybe these are way too many words; I don't know. They're something to watch for and think about. <br />
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But one thing that does become evident to me is that it's mostly about the light. It's the photographs that glow that really appeal to me. <br />
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Looking at these two photos--they both have warm colored walls reflecting sunlight. They both have dark shadows and light highlights to create color contrast. It surprised me actually, how similar they are. Both have diagonals in the composition too. <br />
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And when it comes to flowers, the images that draw my eye are those with lots of light, either shining on or shining through the petals. These two images also have a similarity in that the camera is straight on and they both have a strong color contrast.<br />
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It seems that saturated color really pulls me in. I love the little triangles of bright green in the centre of the flower on the left. And I must confess that I've bumped up the saturation in most of these images. Perhaps this is because I live on the grey Northwest Pacific Coast and I need the hit of vivid colors to balance that.<br />
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These are some of my beginning thoughts. I'm looking forward to working this more. <br />
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<br />Joannahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16449827163911239893noreply@blogger.com17tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8823929003794888807.post-52447144451319501392012-01-15T18:21:00.000-08:002012-01-17T08:38:04.302-08:00A familiar subject<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhPcY6sjY2QDoWy5UDWcqanIavccn5qtIe1eT1qwSk6GSVm-QAmYYLctbvJbEL7gH3eCyChBzSeK5TqkdN88rdSZAy-Nj6l2Ot7-Xsoif3vo2X3gyoT8vy2zlTLa6phOcwei-gfhlfAxEE/s1600/IMG_6719.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="200" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhPcY6sjY2QDoWy5UDWcqanIavccn5qtIe1eT1qwSk6GSVm-QAmYYLctbvJbEL7gH3eCyChBzSeK5TqkdN88rdSZAy-Nj6l2Ot7-Xsoif3vo2X3gyoT8vy2zlTLa6phOcwei-gfhlfAxEE/s200/IMG_6719.jpg" width="148" /></a>Our assignment today at Starting the Journey was to take a bunch of photographs of something we're very familiar with as a subject. For me that has got to be flowers. I adore taking photographs of flowers, especially with the macro lens and the sun shining through the petals. But it's January and there aren't that many flowers blooming in Canada in January--even in Victoria. However just the other day while picking up a coffee at one of my favorite spots I'd noticed some Hellebore blooming in a pot. So this morning I headed over there with my camera. </div>
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Kat's instructions were to take about 50 photographs of the same subject. In fact I took three times that many. And I could have taken more. Now it's not unusual for me to take multiple images of something that catches my eye. But usually I stop at around 20. Maybe because I feel kind of stupid moving around the same thing clicking and clicking and clicking. </div>
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It was a very interesting process to just keep on taking pictures this morning. I started out at a distance and moved in closer and closer. After about 50 photos my fingers were freezing so I headed into the coffee shop to warm up with a latte. <br />
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It was when I went back out that the magic started. For one thing the light was lovely. The air was clear and the sun was gleaming through the petals. Without a thought for the people passing me as they went in and out of the coffee shop I was circling the pot of flowers, looking from all angles, bending down and pointing the camera up at the sky. I found angles and closeups that I never found before.<br />
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I did lose track of time. And before I knew it I'd taken another 105 photographs. And if my fingers weren't so cold I would have stayed and taken more. <br />
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So I headed home and put them up on my computer. Lots of them were boring, or duplicated, or out of focus. I spent most of the afternoon winnowing through the images; probably about three hours or more reviewing them, cropping them, intensifying the contrast or the saturation. It takes time to go through 155 images. Most of the successful ones were from the second half of my photo session. <br />
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I tried to narrow it down to two or three but I ended up with these five. The thing I really learned from this process was that I could take photographs of this one pot of flowers for maybe a week or two. Or maybe a year even. There's something that happens when I come right into the vibration of the flower. It's almost as it I become one with it. I want to capture its essence, its energy, and I feel a push to keep trying until I get it. Until I distill it into one perfect image. <br />
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I don't think I've caught it yet. I think I'd like to go back there tomorrow and take a couple of hundred more. Not sure if I really will though, especially if the temperatures remain below freezing. But this was a real discovery for me. I know and love Hellebores now in a way that I never did before.<br />
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Thank you Kat!<br />
<br />Joannahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16449827163911239893noreply@blogger.com22tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8823929003794888807.post-24327789260868216012012-01-08T14:59:00.000-08:002012-01-09T16:30:59.664-08:00Why do I take photographs?<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg5Hbn-qhwlZR42gsmVgujUwjeUo1A2NiiuOD61Q86kcbGPbt_NZDuzfXPvcQbQ-YQbY3fxOWFrEFyZeMgI_B2ksDS-RwhTsHxR5t5-67b6JQr-Iam2bXwjEBLeL-Vv2C1bghJk_XyoZ_0/s1600/P1070122.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="400" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg5Hbn-qhwlZR42gsmVgujUwjeUo1A2NiiuOD61Q86kcbGPbt_NZDuzfXPvcQbQ-YQbY3fxOWFrEFyZeMgI_B2ksDS-RwhTsHxR5t5-67b6JQr-Iam2bXwjEBLeL-Vv2C1bghJk_XyoZ_0/s400/P1070122.jpg" width="300" /></a>The first part of Kat's Find Your Eye course, Starting the Journey, gets us to answer the question: Why do I take photos? And of course the consideration of "why" really is the basis of everything. I've spent this morning letting that question float about in my mind and I'm coming up with some thoughts.<br />
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First I asked myself how long I've been interested in photography. And I realized that the impulse to create an image was pretty strong even when I was in elementary school. My best friend and I drew all the time. We had sketch books and loved to draw what we saw around us. I remember trying to draw my cat, and learning how to draw horses, and discovering how to create a drawing that looked three dimensional. So drawing was my first response.<br />
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I graduated from university as a teacher with a specialty in art but life took me in other directions and I've never made the time to really pursue drawing or painting with any kind of focus. My first husband had a short-term photo hobby, complete with the SLR camera and the darkroom and lots of photography magazines. I loved those magazines but I wasn't interested in the technical expertise required to achieve those kinds of images. <br />
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For many years the camera was something I pulled out at birthday parties or took on a school field trip. When we traveled I took the point and shoot camera along and really enjoyed capturing the different things we saw. That was when I began trying to capture a mood or the essence of a place. I took a lot of photographs when we spent a month in Greece in 1987. Some of them are pretty nice to look at too. I was captivated by the poppies growing up through the marble columns. But those photos, nice as they were, were just snapshots and the ended up in a box in the back of the closet.<br />
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The advent of digital cameras changed all of that. I love the way this technology allows me to take as many images as I want and then select the best and manipulate from there. It really engages my interest to take and image and crop it, and increase the contrast or saturation, or reduce highlights to make it come alive. Three years ago we made a long driving trip through the USA and Mexico and I took thousands of photographs. I photographed markets, waves, villages, walls, flowers, reflections, kids, and everything I saw in the landscape. I was blogging about my trip and that was another impetus to take lots of photographs and work with them on my laptop to show some of the things we saw on our travels.<br />
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Probably what inspired me most on those trips was close ups of tropical plants, wall textures and colours, and old buildings. My little Lumix served me well for three years until the LCD screen broke this spring. Now I'm learning about some of the technical details that I avoided all those years ago with my new Canon G12. <br />
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But back to the question of why I take photographs. The easy answer is to record the beauty that I see in my world. I am a very visual person. I love colour, line, texture, contrast. I see these everywhere as I travel through my day. I appreciate the expressions on my dogs' faces, the sunlight on the bare tree branches, the contrast of the squash soup with the ivory coloured bowl, the sinuous shape of the kelp floating in the ocean, the shadows on the flower petals. I want to make photographs that evoke the feeling I get when I see these things. I want to keep a record of these moments. And perhaps I want to share these with others who might appreciate them, although I think this is secondary.<br />
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Too often what I see through my viewfinder though, is not what caught my eye. I want to develop the technical expertise to do better at capturing what I see. Often I find that my eye is selective. I see the mist over the softly coloured fields as I walk along the path. But when I look through the viewfinder I'm seeing a bunch of ugly branches in the way. If I were a serious photographer, I'd leave the path and tramp through the mud to the edge of the fence and take the photo I want to. But I generally just abandon it and walk on.<br />
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I guess this is where the internal reasons that Kat talks about come into play. If it's just a sideline to my life I won't make the effort to get the image I want. Of course, in the end it's up to me. By doing this course I'm making a step towards taking myself and my camera more seriously.<br />
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<br />Joannahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16449827163911239893noreply@blogger.com21tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8823929003794888807.post-70038171193719902802012-01-01T20:16:00.001-08:002012-01-01T20:16:46.763-08:00Candelabra<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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I like the dark background of this--as well as the off-centre composition.<br />
<br />Joannahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16449827163911239893noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8823929003794888807.post-88101365997925134182011-12-04T17:32:00.000-08:002011-12-04T21:28:27.826-08:00Beginning the journalHow interesting that the word journal and journey are so similar. I've started this blog because I'm taking Kat's Find Your Eye Photography course to learn more about my own visual journey. The first step is to create a photo journal and this is what I've created. <br />
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Just for starters I want to see how a photograph looks posted here. I took this the other day while walking the dogs. These leaves were clustered in the gutter and the sun was gleaming off the water drops, making them look like shimmery opals. I'm always drawn to shimmer--and to sudden glimpses of treasure.<br />
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<br />Joannahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16449827163911239893noreply@blogger.com6