Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Photography Tips

We were just in London to see the Leonardo show. I pulled out my camera for the first time since I went to Istanbul to spend a few days in a tutorial with Kemal Nuraydin of the Istanbul Photo Workshop, a training experience I highly recommend, by the way. Yesterday I was out in Paris taking a few more pictures and remembered, oh yeah, somebody asked what I learned. I don't know. Maybe my head is spinning from all that travel. It took me a while, but here, finally, is the answer.

First, I don't think Kemal would think much of this picture. Nor do I, except that I like it anyway. It is close to the picture I wish I had taken.

We were at Saint Paul's, where they have an ongoing demonstration -- tents all over and in England they let them stay up. Mayor Bloomberg, we should not be getting reminders on what freedom of assembly means from anywhere on Earth, much less the country we revolted against. Remember when they were the oppressors?

Okay. Back to photography. Lesson One. Do not do what I just did and take a photo on the fly. If you want to photograph something in any kind of serious way, plan to spend some time on it. In this case, adding one more tent to the mix and staying for a week would not be too much.

This was an interesting group of people, from what I saw, well-educated, well organized and with no serious prospect of a job. What was scary was not that folks were camping, right outside St. Paul's. It was that these people, who even in scruffy mode appeared to be eminently hirable,  have had their careers stopped in their tracks by the still unchecked greed of a few. These folks and many others are out of work for the foreseeable future so others can have a bigger megayacht, buy a fifth house, or impress their friends by paying a record price for, say, a shark in formaldehyde.

Okay. Back to photography. Lesson Two. Find a topic that interests you, so that during that day or week or forever, if the topic is something like your kids, you will continue to be motivated to delve more deeply into the subject and to find ways to document it well.

Did I mention that Kemal was editor of National Geographic Turkey? He was, and they were well-served, too. So these comments are either general comments on photography or related to NatGeo-type work. If you want to do, say, fine art photography, I guess you would document your own imagination as if it were something out in the world.

Lesson Three. Practice time is important. Learn your camera controls so well that you can change them in the dark. You never want to have to stop and wonder how to make sure the subject is backlit, or the shadows are right or anything technical at all. When you are working, you want your whole focus to be on the subject.

Lesson Four. Do whatever it takes to change the angle of your image. Raise the camera, lower it, whatever, but avoid the "stand and deliver" thing. That is what I was trying above, not that it worked out so well.

Lesson Five. Get the best equipment you can afford.

Lesson Six. Get a great small camera, so you will always have something with you, even when you are not on a project. Kemal has the new Sony hybrid. Another instructor that was with us for a day, Tomas Tomaszewski, uses a Leica. I guess this suggests a Lesson Six-A, which is that, even though you might separate your serious work from your "on the fly" stuff, you never stop looking for pictures.

There was plenty more that he had to say, but that's enough for now.

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Street Performer in Toulouse

I am constantly taking these photos. These street performers are everywhere, but I never fail to be amazed by their grace and athleticism. But, bravo Lynn, how often do I get arm, face and butt all in focus? I wish it were the start of a trend but truthfully, probably not.

Friday, August 19, 2011


I am getting hooked on my iPhone camera. Seriously, it's my little secret. I took this through the entry window at a building on the Avenue de la Bourdonnais, not far from the Champ de Mars.
Well, okay, it's not your typical picture of Paris. And right across the street is the wildly photogenic Pagoda theater, so what is up here? Actually, not much. I just liked it. Somehow I like the image of autumn and the repeating pattern of the leaves and all. Sometimes that's all it takes for me.

Monday, July 4, 2011

4th of July, El Cerrito

How strange it feels to be in the States for the Fourth of July. Here is a little girl at the local park festival.

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Paris

I hope you all have an endless appetite for photos of the Eiffel Tower. I took this one tonight through the peace monument, at the opposite end of the Champs de Mars. As you can see from the broken safety glass, peace doesn't stand much of a chance these days. I have become interested in the camera in my iPhone. I find that its limitations can be used to create photos that I just would not take with my much fancier Nikon.

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Antietam

Add I am in Paris, so of course I am thinking of the States. I took this photo about a year ago, when Robert and I were visiting our friends Mike and Pearl. I like the patterns and colors. It is difficult to think of this as a battlefield; it just defies the imagination.