You will deduce from the posts on my blog that I am more interested in taking photos and building up a body of work than waxing lyrical about gear and gadgets. There are plenty of sites that do the latter and yet have very little photographic creativity to show for it. I have taken photos using my phone, a 7-year old DSLR, and the latest full frame camera. With digital photography, many people simply use the freedom to ‘spray and pray’, or take multiple images of the same thing, checking the LCD and deleting as they go along. Obviously, this approach negates the use of actual photographic knowledge, or any sense of timing or judgement about composition and exposure. With this in mind, my good friend Bizhan and myself decided the test ourselves this weekend by putting our money where our mouth is. Essentially pretending that we were shooting film, we decided to take up to a maximum of 36 exposures without using the LCD review. We could set the maximum ISO and adjust the aperture and shutter speed manually, and use any lens or tripod we wanted. Any misfires or mistakes counted towards the maximum 36. We thus had to time our shots carefully, trying to achieve the correct exposure and interesting compositions just by using our EYES! We would then review the shots we had taken over dinner later on. I used only the 35mm F/2 AF-D and the 50mm F/1.8G on a D600, and Bizhan used an 18-55mm on his Sony NEX-7. I took 35 shots, 4 of which were misfires (hitting the shutter prematurely or accidentally), 3 were out of focus (tracking skateboarders), and 10 that I simply decided I didn’t like once I had seen them. This left me with 18 exposures that I have presented here. I knew I wanted to render them in black and white, so this influenced my judgement of composition and exposure. Bizhan was even more selective than I, taking around 16 total exposures. It was an interesting exercise, similar to one I had done before with Jena, and reinforced the simple truth that whenever you’re out and about shooting for pleasure, careful consideration of your shots and opportunity will yield fewer, but far better, images than simply hitting the shutter aimlessly and hoping. And it is far better to have a few great images to your name than a ton of mediocrity clogging up your hard drives.
May 21, 2013May 21, 2013Alpha Whiskey PhotographyYou will deduce from the posts on my blog that I am more
interested in taking photos and building up a body of work than waxing lyrical
about gear and gadgets. There are plenty of sites that do the latter and yet
have very little photographic creativity to show for it. I have taken photos
using my phone, a 7-year old DSLR, and the latest full frame camera. With
digital photography, many people simply use the freedom to ‘spray and pray’, or
take multiple images of the same thing, checking the LCD and deleting as they
go along. Obviously, this approach negates the use of actual photographic
knowledge, or any sense of timing or judgement about composition and exposure.
With this in mind, my good friend Bizhan and myself decided
the test ourselves this weekend by putting our money where our mouth is.
Essentially pretending that we were shooting film, we decided to take up to a
maximum of 36 exposures without using the LCD review. We could set the maximum
ISO and adjust the aperture and shutter speed manually, and use any lens or
tripod we wanted. Any misfires or mistakes counted towards the maximum 36. We
thus had to time our shots carefully, trying to achieve the correct exposure
and interesting compositions just by using our EYES! We would then review the
shots we had taken over dinner later on.
I used only the 35mm F/2 AF-D and the 50mm F/1.8G on a D600,
and Bizhan used an 18-55mm on his Sony NEX-7.
I took 35 shots, 4 of which were misfires (hitting the
shutter prematurely or accidentally), 3 were out of focus (tracking
skateboarders), and 10 that I simply decided I didn’t like once I had seen
them. This left me with 18 exposures that I have presented here. I knew I
wanted to render them in black and white, so this influenced my judgement of
composition and exposure.
Bizhan was even more selective than I, taking around 16
total exposures.
It was an interesting exercise, similar to one I had done before with Jena, and reinforced the simple
truth that whenever you’re out and about shooting for pleasure, careful
consideration of your shots and opportunity will yield fewer, but far better, images than simply hitting
the shutter aimlessly and hoping. And it is far better to have a few great
images to your name than a ton of mediocrity clogging up your hard drives.
There seemed to be a lot of these guys in London blowing bubbles for money. Amazing what you can do with a little washing up liquid(!)
May 21, 2013May 21, 2013Alpha Whiskey Photography
Blowing Bubbles
Upload Date: May 20, 2013 01:31 PM
Show Photo Info
Close |
2
May 21, 2013May 21, 2013Alpha Whiskey Photography
2
Upload Date: May 20, 2013 01:31 PM
Show Photo Info
Close |
3
May 21, 2013May 21, 2013Alpha Whiskey Photography
3
Upload Date: May 20, 2013 01:31 PM
Show Photo Info
Close |
4
May 21, 2013May 21, 2013Alpha Whiskey Photography
4
Upload Date: May 20, 2013 01:32 PM
Show Photo Info
Close |
5
May 21, 2013May 21, 2013Alpha Whiskey Photography
5
Upload Date: May 20, 2013 01:32 PM
Show Photo Info
Close |
Singing in The Thames!
May 21, 2013May 21, 2013Alpha Whiskey Photography
6
Upload Date: May 20, 2013 01:32 PM
Show Photo Info
Close |
7
May 21, 2013May 21, 2013Alpha Whiskey Photography
7
Upload Date: May 20, 2013 01:32 PM
Show Photo Info
Close |
8
May 21, 2013May 21, 2013Alpha Whiskey Photography
8
Upload Date: May 20, 2013 01:34 PM
Show Photo Info
Close |
9
May 21, 2013May 21, 2013Alpha Whiskey Photography
9
Upload Date: May 20, 2013 01:34 PM
Show Photo Info
Close |
10
May 21, 2013May 21, 2013Alpha Whiskey Photography
10
Upload Date: May 20, 2013 01:34 PM
Show Photo Info
Close |
11
May 21, 2013May 21, 2013Alpha Whiskey Photography
11
Upload Date: May 20, 2013 01:34 PM
Show Photo Info
Close |
Slightly out of focus, but then so were many photos before autofocus was invented ;)
May 21, 2013May 21, 2013Alpha Whiskey Photography
12
Upload Date: May 20, 2013 01:34 PM
Show Photo Info
Close |
Little bit too much going on here, but I like the little girl's fascination with the bubble.
May 21, 2013May 21, 2013Alpha Whiskey Photography
13
Upload Date: May 20, 2013 01:34 PM
Show Photo Info
Close |
14
May 21, 2013May 21, 2013Alpha Whiskey Photography
14
Upload Date: May 20, 2013 01:34 PM
Show Photo Info
Close |
15
May 21, 2013May 21, 2013Alpha Whiskey Photography
15
Upload Date: May 20, 2013 01:34 PM
Show Photo Info
Close |
16
May 21, 2013May 21, 2013Alpha Whiskey Photography
16
Upload Date: May 20, 2013 01:34 PM
Show Photo Info
Close |
17
May 21, 2013May 21, 2013Alpha Whiskey Photography
17
Upload Date: May 20, 2013 01:34 PM
Show Photo Info
Close |
And there's Bizhan reflected and reflecting!
May 21, 2013May 21, 2013Alpha Whiskey Photography
18
Upload Date: May 20, 2013 01:34 PM
Show Photo Info
Close |
|
BizhanMay 21, 2013 04:25 PM
Was a great day and a really good exercise!
One more point that I found - other than making the whole challenge difficult, the fact that every shot was thought for and calculated made the end result that much more satisfying, knowing that it wasn't really down to luck.
Looking forward to doing it again :)
AlphaWhiskeyMay 21, 2013 04:37 PM
Amen to that! Look forward to it! :)
Brian T. AdamsMay 23, 2013 07:14 PM
nice work! I like the first one with all the bubbles and the one of the person playing guitar in the water the most. nice collection overall as you didn't shoot the same type of shot over and over which lends to telling a story of where you were. nice, keep it up!
AlphaWhiskeyMay 23, 2013 07:21 PM
Thanx Brian!
All fields are required.
Comment successfully added.