Thursday, July 30, 2009

WALLINGFORD ART WALK
Photo Exhibition at Alliance Chiropractic on 45th
(west of Dicks Burgers)
Wednesday August 5th
6-8 PM

Stop by and enjoy some refreshments and a chair massage too. Bring your friends, spouse, partner, kids...

Click the link for more information: www.wallingfordartwalk.org

Friday, June 19, 2009

Close Up!


There's the old adage of "get close to your subject".  Some say if you think you are close, go ahead and take another step forward.  In many instances the subject is in the photo with loads of dead space surrounding him/her/it. 

Look first at your subject and decide what is most important.  Is it the person, or the beach?  If it is the person, then step in.  Merely a suggestion of the background is all that is required when taking portraits.  However, if you want to photograph the beach itself as the subject and you want to include the person somewhere in the photo, then get down to the beach level and let the person be secondary to the subject of the beach.  Maybe the person has his feet in the water, and that's all you choose to photograph because the water is more important in this photo.  In my beach photo, I chose the beach as my subject - the children running ahead are suggesting the story but they are not the subject.

Enjoy Summer and happy snapping!


Thursday, May 14, 2009

What About Contrast?


A good balance between the light and dark of contrast.  Compare this to the other two photos.
WHAT ABOUT CONTRAST?












Left: contrast flat Right: too contrasty

I've seen a lot of photos recently where the contrast has made what could have been a great photo, a bad photo.  

Contrast is the variation between the light and dark areas of your photo.  Every photo has a level of contrast, which can be changed in various photo shop type applications.  When a photo has too much contrast there is a greater disparity between the dark and light areas of your photo, hence "too contrasty."  The result might be that the details of the white areas of your photo fade away.  The details in the dark areas might be so dark that you can't see anything, just black.  Going in the other direction might be that there isn't enough contrast so that the photo feels dull, the details are not crisp and everything has a monotone or flat feel.

If you only have a little point and shoot digital camera then make sure you have as much light as possible before you take the photo.  No matter what the lighting source, turn it all on.  Even if part of the lighting is from birthday cake candles, you still need more light.  Fat candles work better than thin candles and don't turn the lights off before you blow out the candles (which is what my family always did when I was a kid).  Always use the built in flash when indoors.  Sometimes even during a sunny day outdoors, you might still need the flash.  I use a flash when my subject is in the shade of a tree and it is a sunny day.  Maybe the subject has his back to the sun, then use the flash.  

So, turn on the lights, use the flash and look for good subjects that have a balance of contrast.

Happy snapping!

Thursday, April 9, 2009

It's All In The Framing

It's all in the framing.  A good photo is made by many things - lighting, composition, emotion and framing for example.  Some photographers are all about the framing and it's a good thing.  Don't know what I'm on about?  Then grab a piece of cardboard and cut a 1 inch by 2 inch hole in it, then find an interesting subject and frame it up with your holey cardboard.  You can play with what the photo would potentially look like by moving your cardboard around until you find the most pleasing frame for it.   Practice for a week and then go back to taking photos - I bet your photos will look so much the better for all your hard eye workouts.  

Saturday, April 4, 2009

Deliberate Spontaneity

When does taking a photo stop being an abstract and start being a mirror of what the photographer is thinking at that moment?  

If it's just point and click then there's no forethought or premeditation behind what the final product looks like.  And, I'm not saying there is anything wrong with this, it's kind of like catch what you can so that the photo is spontaneous.  Then there is the photographer with a keen eye and an awareness of what his, or her, subject might do next. The ability to plan ahead with a final product in mind can be the key to making a great photo.  

The next time you take out your camera give it a go - think of a shot you would like to get and plan for it.  Be ready for when it happens.  In the interim, warm up with being spontaneous but be ready for when that "moment" happens.  I call it "deliberate spontaneity".   You know it the moment it happens.  It's that perfect photo, the one that captures emotion, the essence of someone, their defining moment.

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Slapped Cheek in our schools

Apparently there are a lot of sick kids around but you'd hardly know it until you see a rash and by then it's too late.  5th Disease, or Slapped Cheek as it is otherwise known, is running rampant through some Seattle schools.  There are aches and pains in joints, sore throats, tummy aches, a low grade on and off fever, and lastly the red cheeks (rash).  If you think your kid is just trying to get out of going to school and doesn't appear to be sick, then check further because it might be 5 th Disease.  Adults can get it too!

Friday, March 13, 2009

Do you FotoFlot?

FotoFlot is a new(ish) company that I like to use for a clean modern looking way to display photos.  No frame involved, just the photo that is laminated to an acrylic board which you can display on desktop or wall mount with brackets (brackets are included).  

10% off FOTOFLOT orders - enter "Spring 09" at checkout.  Offer is good until May 31.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Good Things


There's nothing like seeing a little girl dressed as a Princess to make you feel good about life.  Sunshine, tiara's, pink dresses, fairy wands and the shoes, oh the shoes...  

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

A long time ago there was a big rock... It's still there. Anyone seen it lately? I've entered a photography competition called "Name Your Dream Assignment" - my idea is "Outback to Ocean - The beauty and distress of Australia". It would be a photographic journey from the opal mines meandering past sheep farms through Port Lincoln back to the Barossa and then Adelaide. If you love this idea then log in and vote for my "Outback to Ocean" idea.
Name Your Dream Assignment

G'Day - I'm just getting my blog going.  Check back soon for new posting's.

Thanks for stopping by

Susan