Draft Pages
Related Local Links:
Medium Format Home Page
Medium Format Cameras List Page
The perfect is the enemy of the good...
There are many ideas which can help you avoid the "plateau trap".
Keep records
Photographers hate record keeping. You can make it much easier by getting
a tiny tape recorder and using it to record your notes and activities. For
less money, you can create a workbook of notes recording your efforts.
Error analysis
Error analysis is something most photographers _don't_ do. Facing your
mistakes can be painful. But it can be very useful and profitable too. The
idea is to figure out why you have so many rejects (we all have more than
we think is justified ;-).
For example, suppose a number of your shots are not sharp. Why? Are they
out of focus, perhaps due to failing eyesight? low light levels? Are they
unsharp due to camera movement? Wrong shutter speed to freeze
motion?
Challenges
One of my favorite challenges is to take a lens and go do some photographs
by using that lens in as many different ways as possible on a roll of
film. Having just one lens forces you to focus on issues you might
otherwise avoid if you had a full kit of lenses along.
You may be amazed to find out how versatile that 24mm lens can be. The
close focusing distance is amazingly close. Macro photography is readily
possible, with interesting effects from massive depth of field being
available. An extension tube can transform many lenses into the
macro-range, as can a low weight lens reversing ring. Many
photographers are now using a 24mm lens as an "in your face" street
portraiture lens. With care, you can make full-body shots and others which
are hard to tell from more normal focal length lens portraits
(hint: bubble level for horizon).
From Contax Mailing List:
Date: Mon, 17 Jul 2000
From: "Bob Shell" [email protected]
Subject: Re: [CONTAX] Shots of Yellowstone
One other thing I learned. Except for total disasters I don't throw any
photos away. Some images I didn't like ten years ago may set me on fire
today. I may get a call for images and remember some I didn't consider
much of a success and dig them out of the files and the client thinks they
are perfect. Today I'm very glad I had that policy since I can now use
Photoshop to fix problems in older images which were impossible to fix
when they were shot. Some of the ones I did throw away could probably be
saved if I still had them.
My office is mostly filing cabinets as a result of this "never throw
anything away" attitude.
Bob
...
>I try not to count all the slides that go "kerplunk" into >the wastebasket when I get that "much awaited" roll back, but sometimes it's >quite disheartening.