“Who Do You Have a Photography Crush On?” plus 1 more: Digital Photography School | ![]() |
Posted: 19 Jun 2011 01:20 PM PDT ![]() A Photographer who you’d love to meet and pick the brains or even spend the day with on a shoot of in the hope that some of their genius might rub off on you? They might be a famous photographer – or perhaps they’re someone most of us have never heard of. Whoever they are – we’d like to hear about them in comments below. We asked this a couple of years back and found some great photographers in your answers – so lets do it again. Please Share the Following:
Image by FotoRita Post from: Digital Photography School's Photography Tips. Check out our resources on Portrait Photography Tips, Travel Photography Tips and Understanding Digital Cameras. ![]() Who Do You Have a Photography Crush On? |
Posted: 19 Jun 2011 07:01 AM PDT ![]() A picture is what you take when you accidentally mash your hands on the shutter release while your camera sits idle on the living room table. It's when you bump the camera while it hangs from your shoulder and snap that oddly angled picture of your feet. It's the photos you took of your friend just because they asked you to. It's also generally what most of us are shooting the first time we pick up our cameras – myself included. But if you really want to advance your photography, you've got to stop pressing that shutter release just because you can. Instead, take the time to create a vision. Stop taking pictures. Start creating images. Professionals Create ImagesWe all admire the fantastic work of professional photographers from around the globe. It's not simply because their photos are perfectly exposed, their white balance is spot on or they followed an exacting rule of thirds guideline. Given enough practice, anybody can do these. Many photographers still do. There's a simple element that separates those photographers you admire from those you don't.Good photographers take great pictures, great photographers create images. An image is something that evokes an emotional response from the viewer. It speaks to us individually and conveys some form of attraction or connection with a photo. Whether it's longing, awe, desire, fear or any one of a thousand other, an image elicits within us a response. The ability to combine the technical with the creative and create an image is what separates a great photographer from a good one. Fueling that creativity is a constant journey we should all strive to be better at every day. It's something I work at every day as well. None of us have it right from the start, and even veterans of 20 and 30 years are pushing every day to take it to that next level. Here are a few techniques I've found helpful on my own drive towards creating images and not just taking pictures. ![]() Continue Shooting and Start PlanningIf it sounded like I've been telling you to stop shooting, it's exactly the opposite! As well-know commercial photographer Chase Jarvis says, the best camera is the one you have with you. Shooting every day, even with a simple camera phone, helps develop your eye for pleasing compositions, great locations and visionary editorials. But you don't want to be taking just pictures anymore. You want a mix of pictures and images.What you need to add to create those images now is a plan. That doesn't mean you need to look for six assistants, a creative director, three models and twelve lights! The start of your plan can be as simple as spending an afternoon out with your friends and showing them having a good time, keeping a vision in mind. A practice I've always found helpful is to ask myself, "Why am I taking this photo? Why is it different from any other out there? What am I trying to convey with it? What emotion am I trying to invoke? Who is my audience?" |
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