Sometimes, Equipment Matters

I am not a gear head and I don’t want this blog to be about gear. Truthfully, the technical aspects of photography and camera gear bore me. I’m sure that it is really important and I’m happy that the techies at Canon, Nikon, Sony, Fuji, etc. pay attention to it. Obviously, cameras today are much better than previous generations and there are all sorts of technical reasons why, but none of really interests me - I trust that the experts are, well, experts.

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10 Most Meaningful Posts of 2018: #1

When your daughter tells you that you will be taking her senior picture, well, you better prepare, and I did. From the summer of 2017 when Lizzy gave me the heads up until August of 2018 when I captured this image, I watched Youtube videos, completed LinkedIn Learning courses, and studied the work of Chris Orwig - a natural light portrait photographer from California.

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10 Most Meaningful Images of 2018: #6

I am lucky enough to live next to a town forest with more than ten miles of walking trails with thousands of deciduous trees. In the fall, those trees turn to the beautiful colors of autumns. The green leaves yield to the season and become the deep reds, yellow and oranges of a New England autumn.

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10 Most Meaningful Images of 2018: #8

For years I have said that I would not shoot portraits. Even now I have little interest in shooting studio portraits. The thought of sitting in a studio shooting the same shot over and over again just doesn’t appeal to me. But, my interest in shooting portraits was forced to change about 18 months ago.

"Dad, you’re going to take my senior picture.”

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5 Tips for Winter Photography

One of the benefits of shooting in the winter is that the light at sunrise and sunset can be amazing.  Couple the later sunrise times with the early sunset times, and getting out when the light is best is easier in the winter.  Additionally, because the sun does not rise as high in the winter months, it takes a shallower angle across our horizon, which means that the magical light that comes at sunrise and sunset lasts longer, so dress warm and take advantage of that time.  

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Shoot for Joy

I recently had the opportunity to listen to and shoot with Bryan Peterson at the Out of Acadia conference in Maine.  During his talk (and subsequent excursions out in the park), Bryan talked about the difference between shooting for satisfaction and shooting for joy.  According to Bryan, a "satisfactory image" is the bucket list image, the one you can buy at the gift shop.  For landscape photographers, satisfactory images are often those iconic locations you have to shoot, the ones that everyone shoots (postcards) but you need as part of your portfolio to legitimize your portfolio. 

But, "joyful" images are those you create and thus are unique to your portfolio.  They are, in a way, discovered by you and in his talk, Bryan challenged us to discover more joy in our photography because, as he explained, what drives photographers are not the satisfying shots, it’s the joyful shots.  

(Side note:  Dean Shareski has been writing and talking about the importance of joy in education for a long time.  His TED Talk on this topic can be found here)

Vermont Sunset Stowe, VT

Vermont Sunset
Stowe, VT

After his talk I thought quite a bit about my portfolio, I found a lot of truth in Bryan's words.  Of all of the images I have created over the years, there is one that is undoubtedly my most talked about.  It's also an award winner.  

This cow was not bringing me joy when I first saw her.  I had positioned myself in a field in beautiful Stowe, VT, using a meandering fence as a leading line toward Mount Mansfield with a beautiful summer sunset overhead.  While waiting for the light to be just right, dozens of cows came running across the field, right up to the fence I was using in my shot.  Curses! They were now in my shot.  Cows in the foreground are not iconic!  I picked up my gear and starting moving around, looking to somehow engineer a composition that excluded the cows, but wherever I went they all followed.  They simply wouldn't get out of the way!  After ten minutes, the number of cows mirroring my every moment had dropped to just one.  But she wasn't giving up, when I moved, she moved.

By this point, my family and friends were well into dinner and most likely a few local brews back at the condo we rented and I couldn't shake this freakin' cow.  She was in the way, the light was fading, and I was angry.  My iconic (read:  satisfying) shot of a summer sunset over Mt. Mansfield was going to be lost.

And then it hit me, the sunset wasn't the subject, SHE was.  She was the "joyful shot" waiting to be created. Once I stopped feeling sorry for myself and realized I was missing the REAL shot, I took the camera off the tripod, cranked the ISO up to 1600, hand held it close to the ground tilted up, and hit the shutter.  Once.  I would like to say that the matching colors of the flowers and the sunset coupled with the cow staring right at the camera was all planned, but in reality it was just dumb luck... nothing preplanned, nothing thought out.  It was simply an instinctive action to capture something different, something no one else had. 

Sitting in Bryan's talk in Acadia, more than year after this image was created, I realized that I was in Stowe shooting for satisfaction (the iconic Vermont sunset), but the magic happened when my mindset opened itself up to shooting for joy.  As a result, not only has this image become my best selling image (by far) it is one that no other photographer has. 

She is all mine, and that fills me with joy.

 

PS:  Recently she became a covergirl having won the AAA Northern New England 2017 Photo Contest. 

Holy Cow

Holy Cow