August 2024 |
September 2024 |
October 2024 |
Below are the three most recent Here's a Thought . . . commentaries
You can have access to all 2,000+ commentaries
and that's just the tip of the iceberg — see what else you are missing!
Become a member of LensWork Online — 30-day Trial Membership is just $10 |
Sunday |
Monday |
Tuesday |
Wednesday |
Thursday |
Friday |
Saturday |
1
HT2002 - A Picture at Random |
Normally speaking, we process and print only our very best images. Setting aside the question about how "the best" is determined, I'd like to propose an alternative experiment. What can you do creatively with an image from your digital archives picked at random? In truth, these images teach us more than when we process only our best. |
|
2
HT2003 - The Compulsories |
Certain subjects or themes seem to pop up with extraordinary frequency. Why do so many photographers make images of the predictable? Sand dunes, lone tree on a hill, lacy waterfall, colorful fall leaves blanketing the hillside, barren trees in the fog, beautiful blossom isolated on a black background - - the list itself is predictable. Are these subjects magically attractive, or photographically easy? |
|
3
HT2004 - Consider All the Angles |
In 1990, I went to rural Japan for a 3-week photography adventure. I was accompanied by my friend, David Grant Best. Watching him work. Watching him work was both an education and revelation about composition. |
|
4
HT2005 - A Frustration with PDFs |
For us who care about layout and design, who value elegant typography, who want aesthetic control of our digital presentations and publications, PDFs are the answer. That does not mean, however, that they are frustration free |
|
5
HT2006 - Fixed In Time |
Because we live at specific times, we can't help but produce our artwork in time. Everything we do is a function of the times in which we live. That's worth remembering, that in the future our work will be seen in the context of the era in which we live. |
|
6
HT2007 - What Great Paintings Say |
Photography, more than any other of the visual arts, can easily become mere eye candy. Learning how to see beyond the "pretty" requires some training. There is a 2-volume set titled, What Great Paintings Say by Rose-Marie and Rainer Hagen (published by Taschen) that are a wonderful introduction to this way of thinking. |
|
7
HT2008 - Just a Little Bit Tired |
Here is an odd observation from years of photography that has been consistently true. I see more creatively when I am a little bit tired. Too tired makes me lazy. A bit tired slows my chattering mind enough to allow my intuition to surface. |
|
8
HT2009 - Noticing the Unnoticed |
There is undeniable fun in photographing (or should I say re-photographing) the cliché. In doing so we can feel a sense of accomplishment and even pride. I've always felt that noticing and photographing the unnoticed provides an even great sense of accomplishment.
|
|
9
HT2010 - My Precious, Precious Photograph |
Are photographs precious? A photographic print from a long-lost master may very well be precious. A contemporary print by any of us is anything but precious. After all, we can knock out copies by the hundreds if we have a need to. I can't think of any other art medium that flips in value so dramatically. In fact, our contemporary clutching over our "precious" artwork reminds me of a certain fictional character. |
|
10
HT2011 - Opposite Problems |
Black shades and white shades present us with opposite problems. Pure whites have no detail and need to be toned down. Dead blacks have no details and need to be lifted. Of the two, blasted whites are far more visually troubling than crunched blacks. |
|
11
HT2012 - People or Things |
A great deal of photography is about one of two subjects: people or things. I've always thought that the best photographs are about a moment.
|
|
12
HT2013 - Lost Opportunities |
Sometimes I don't have my camera with me. I always have my smartphone with me. So, I always have a camera with me, everywhere, right? Not really. Yesterday was a typical and frustrating example. |
|
13
HT2014 - Simplicity and Clarity |
It is not a guarantee that simplicity in a composition makes a better photograph, but for the kind of work I like to do, I find it is true more often than not. In fact, it is my strategy for almost every composition I make. The world is a chaotic and complicated thing. Making art is an interpretive activity whose goal is to express the complexity of life with clarity and understanding. |
|
14
HT2015 - Mismatch |
I've just finished reviewing a couple of hundred photography projects each of which included an artist statement by way of introduction to the photographs. I was absolutely flabbergasted how many times the text did not fit with the photographs or vice versa |
|
All 2,000+ previous Here's a Thought are available
to members of LensWork Online |
15
HT2016 - Gimmickry |
Yesterday I mentioned that I have just completed reviewing a couple of hundred projects. A very significant number of these this year included some sort of processing gimmick that was supposed to add depth and meaning to the photographs but actually became a distraction and/or a trite attempt to make weak photography significant. |
|
16
HT2017 - Projects As Questions |
In this group of 200 projects I've been talking about the last couple of days, a common thread of so many of them was that the photographer was trying to tell us rather than to ask us. The projects were rather preachy. Photographs can easily be declarative images that propose answers, but evocative photographs ask questions rather than preach conclusions. |
|
17
HT2018 - Photography at 60mph |
After having driven roughly 1800 miles in the last few days, I cannot tell you how many potential photographs I've seen and sped past at 60 mph. It's frustrating to see so many opportunities while we are driving and have no chance of making a picture. Perhaps this is why I love dirt road photography in the landscape so much. |
|
18
HT2019 - Photography At 60 mph, Part 2 |
As I was discussing yesterday, I often pass by many photographic opportunities when driving down the road. The more important lesson is what happens when I do stop. I don't ever remember stopping and not finding a photograph. Is it possible that we could stop at random and find something interesting? |
|
19
HT2020 - Not a Wildlife Photographer |
I've made no secret that I am not a wildlife photographer. But there I was, in Custer State Park in South Dakota surrounded by buffalo. How do I not make a few pictures? Do we have to have a purpose? Does our photography have to be serious? Is fun a sufficient excuse for pulling out the camera? |
|
20
HT2021 - Retracing the Circle |
I spent the day yesterday photographing in Custer State Park here in South Dakota. A strategy I often use was my modus operandi yesterday: I retraced my morning route in the afternoon, but in the opposite direction. Different light, different clouds, different moods and moments. |
|
21
HT2022 - Close Your Eyes |
We photographers are such visual people that our sense of sight can overwhelm our experience. I often find it useful to close my eyes and let my other senses open to the experience. Strangely enough, when I reopen my eyes I see differently and more deeply. |
|
22
HT2023 - Initial Disappointment |
My first look at the images I captured that day are often a disappointment. Is that because the memory of them is too fresh? I've observed over the years that my initial disappointment often converts to excitement when I work on an image sometime later. |
|
23
HT2024 - Which Way the Shadows Fall |
All of us are sensitive to the angle of the sun when we are out photographing. I find it more useful to think in terms of which way the shadows fall. The sun itself is rarely in my pictures, but every picture has its shadows. Said another way, shadows are a part of the visual composition, the sun is usually outside of the composition. |
|
24
HT2025 - Statistical Needs |
Like most "serious" photographers, I have several lenses I carry with me to provide the ideal solution for various shooting scenarios. Statistically however, my Lightroom catalog shows I only need one lens — at least for 75% of my shots. That can't be right. |
|
25
HT2026 - Base Camp |
During this last couple of weeks of photography, I was reminded how much I prefer a base camp approach to travel. We've been doing the opposite. We stopped for a night, maybe two, then move on to the next location. That doesn't leave a lot of time for photography, but worse doesn't leave a lot of time to get to know a place well. I much prefer a base camp approach where I stay in one location for a week or a month or even longer. |
|
26
HT2027 - Image Stabilization in the Wind |
Here's an odd observation from last week's photography in South Dakota. It was windy all week. In reviewing my images, I noticed that the shots made with a longer focal length are sharper than those made with a shorter focal length. In the wind, I would have expected just the opposite. |
|
27
HT2028 - The Running Narrative |
So often when I have a chance to look at another photographer's work, there is a running narrative that accompanies my view of each image. When I move to the next image, the narrative repeats. That universal narrative is the location of where the image was captured. Divorced from the images, the spoken accompaniment is merely a travel list. Is this the best way to narrate our images? |
|
28
HT2029 - Performing for the Camera |
When my kids were young, the instant they saw me pull out the camera they began posing in a performance for the lens. Getting past that artificiality was a challenge. Strangely enough, the lesson how to do this came from a microphone. |
|
29
HT2030 - Fond Memories |
I was given a tour of an analog darkroom a few days ago. The smell of fixer, the stack of washed and drying paper trays, that magical red light. So many memories. I do miss my youth, but I have to admit that I don't miss those hours and hours of frustration to produce one print that was not quite satisfactory. I miss my youth, but I don't miss the darkroom that was such a large part of my early days. |
|
30
HT2031 - Unfinished Work |
For a good portion of my creative life, I would show my unfinished work. That was the work I was currently thinking about, spending time working on, most excited about. At some point, I realized how unfulfilling this was to the viewer as well as to me! Now I only show my finished work. Instead of displaying my potential, I concentrate on displaying my accomplishments - - and hope they are important enough to share. |
|
|
|
|
|
|