patching...
Welcome back, Patch Blogger!
Local Voices

Limit Your Vision For Better Photography

Amateur photographers have often told me that they did not know what to photograph. They felt as if their photography was hampered by a failure to identify good subject matter. Our surroundings are filled with good photographic subjects. Often we fail to recognize it because it is something we see everyday so its photogenic quality is lost to us because of familiarity. We often exclude the familiar when deciding on a subject for our photography. If we do that, we miss opportunities to make good photographs that are frequently right in front of us as we pass them by.

One way to overcome not recognizing the photo opportunities is to practice selective vision. It is simple to do. When you are out on a photo excursion, limit your awareness to a specific type of subject matter.  By excluding most of what surrounds you automatically concentrate your vision on what you are specifically looking for. In the accompanying gallery of photos I have selected only images that incorporate windows. I like windows because they are walls that you can see through. Often there are interesting subjects on the other side. There are a few samples in the gallery.

Selma Davis

7:32 am on Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Are you interested in a Leica 35mm enlarger?

Reply

Richard Weisgrau

8:50 am on Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Selma, I have not used film for over a decade now. While a Leica enlarger is among the best ever made, I have no use for one.

Reply

Amanda Mahnke

10:47 pm on Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Can I request a future blog? I'm really bad at figuring out how to deal with lighting when I take my camera off semi-automatic. I know how to (and do) change the shutter speed, but do other settings play into that too? (No rush, but I'm definitely interested in this if you get a chance to address the technical side of things at some point!)

Reply
Comment_arrow

Richard Weisgrau

11:26 pm on Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Amanda, It will be my next blog post. Look for it early in the new week.

Amanda Mahnke

9:43 am on Friday, June 8, 2012

Thanks! Case in point: your grad photos as opposed to my grad photos, taken in the same building under the same lighting conditions. Yikes.

Reply

Leave a comment