Ugly Hedgehog - Photography Forum
Home Active Topics Newest Pictures Search Login Register
Main Photography Discussion
The "Emotion" of Photography
Page <<first <prev 4 of 6 next> last>>
Mar 16, 2024 13:27:30   #
Heaththiel Loc: Wisconsin
 
That's pretty cool. I like what you're doing with both your photography and the written word. Keep up the great work.

Reply
Mar 16, 2024 13:28:56   #
polyman6 Loc: Chatham Ontario
 
I can also read it fine, great job well done please show more.

Reply
Mar 16, 2024 14:46:17   #
spaceytracey Loc: East Glacier Park, MT
 
The back & forth of the size & readability aside, I find emotions are an intrinsic element in photography. How we feel about the subject, are we "in the mood" to take photos, all influence the end result. Many years ago I worked on a project with another person who was overbearing, to say the least. Each day we headed out to the wilderness to capture relevant landscapes. Each day felt like I was being bullied into taking pictures. I hated it. Eventually, I learned to suppress my resentment & envelope myself in the subject & the work. The difference in my emotions could be seen quite starkly in the quality of my work.

Reply
 
 
Mar 16, 2024 16:09:36   #
Juy Loc: Delaware
 
Very nice image and wording. Don't fall victim to those whom can't be pleased

Reply
Mar 16, 2024 16:30:22   #
User ID
 
Juy wrote:
Very nice image and wording. Don't fall victim to those whom can't be pleased

Or are too easily bored ....

Reply
Mar 16, 2024 16:38:33   #
Timmers Loc: San Antonio Texas.
 
Lionsgate wrote:
A LITTLE BACKGROUND: I've been taking pictures since 1958 when my grandmother bought me my first camera, a Kodak Brownie Hawkeye. I like to think that those simple beginnings brought me to where I am today. I currently sell my work domestically and internationally through two websites. I'm self-trained but have taken a class here and there on lighting techniques and darkroom operations. With the dawn of digital imaging, I have left the darkroom in favor of digital editing.

THE EMOTION OF PHOTOGRAPHY: I now have the time (I'm retired) to travel and explore with my cameras. While I have been known to take more than 5,000 photos in a single day, I try to be selective with my scenes. The only time I take a large number of shots is when photographing wildlife. That said, I have spent hours in a single location; shooting from different angles and changing light. The overriding factor in this is how I felt about the scene. What was I thinking, feeling, and remembering while I viewed the subject? There is a line in the Star Trek IV "The Voyage Home" where the testing computer asks Spock "How do you feel?" That is how I approach my photography. I take notes about the scene and what I was feeling and why I stopped to take those photos. I do the same thing in post-production processing. What I felt plays a part in how I crop the scene and adjust the lighting.
Last year I began writing stories and poetry to mate with my photographs. All of those works have been copyrighted and are now being published into a series of photo/poetry books. Here is an example: "Abandoned Buckboard"

THOUGHTS? COMMENTS?
A LITTLE BACKGROUND: I've been taking pictures sin... (show quote)


Ansel would tell you to not wait to retire, but to shoot between jobs/work.

Ansel Adams, Moon Rise, Hernandez New Mexico, 1940.
Ansel Adams, Moon Rise, Hernandez New Mexico, 1940...

Reply
Mar 16, 2024 17:53:36   #
joecichjr Loc: Chicago S. Suburbs, Illinois, USA
 
The cemetery seems to be bigger than the whole town πŸ€πŸ€”πŸ€

Reply
 
 
Mar 16, 2024 17:57:45   #
pithydoug Loc: Catskill Mountains, NY
 
Lionsgate wrote:
A LITTLE BACKGROUND: I've been taking pictures since 1958 when my grandmother bought me my first camera, a Kodak Brownie Hawkeye. I like to think that those simple beginnings brought me to where I am today. I currently sell my work domestically and internationally through two websites. I'm self-trained but have taken a class here and there on lighting techniques and darkroom operations. With the dawn of digital imaging, I have left the darkroom in favor of digital editing.

THE EMOTION OF PHOTOGRAPHY: I now have the time (I'm retired) to travel and explore with my cameras. While I have been known to take more than 5,000 photos in a single day, I try to be selective with my scenes. The only time I take a large number of shots is when photographing wildlife. That said, I have spent hours in a single location; shooting from different angles and changing light. The overriding factor in this is how I felt about the scene. What was I thinking, feeling, and remembering while I viewed the subject? There is a line in the Star Trek IV "The Voyage Home" where the testing computer asks Spock "How do you feel?" That is how I approach my photography. I take notes about the scene and what I was feeling and why I stopped to take those photos. I do the same thing in post-production processing. What I felt plays a part in how I crop the scene and adjust the lighting.
Last year I began writing stories and poetry to mate with my photographs. All of those works have been copyrighted and are now being published into a series of photo/poetry books. Here is an example: "Abandoned Buckboard"

THOUGHTS? COMMENTS?
A LITTLE BACKGROUND: I've been taking pictures sin... (show quote)


I really like your growing thought process! Best of luck!

Reply
Mar 16, 2024 18:22:38   #
Timmers Loc: San Antonio Texas.
 
joecichjr wrote:
The cemetery seems to be bigger than the whole town πŸ€πŸ€”πŸ€


So funny! LOL!!! I stopped by one time, the guys I was with though I was nuts, one used his cell phone and told them "It is important! "Modern photographers!"

Any way, there are even more graves now, apparently its been there a long time!

Reply
Mar 16, 2024 22:10:15   #
Fleckrc Loc: Lufkin, TX
 
Lionsgate wrote:
A LITTLE BACKGROUND: I've been taking pictures since 1958 when my grandmother bought me my first camera, a Kodak Brownie Hawkeye. I like to think that those simple beginnings brought me to where I am today. I currently sell my work domestically and internationally through two websites. I'm self-trained but have taken a class here and there on lighting techniques and darkroom operations. With the dawn of digital imaging, I have left the darkroom in favor of digital editing.

THE EMOTION OF PHOTOGRAPHY: I now have the time (I'm retired) to travel and explore with my cameras. While I have been known to take more than 5,000 photos in a single day, I try to be selective with my scenes. The only time I take a large number of shots is when photographing wildlife. That said, I have spent hours in a single location; shooting from different angles and changing light. The overriding factor in this is how I felt about the scene. What was I thinking, feeling, and remembering while I viewed the subject? There is a line in the Star Trek IV "The Voyage Home" where the testing computer asks Spock "How do you feel?" That is how I approach my photography. I take notes about the scene and what I was feeling and why I stopped to take those photos. I do the same thing in post-production processing. What I felt plays a part in how I crop the scene and adjust the lighting.
Last year I began writing stories and poetry to mate with my photographs. All of those works have been copyrighted and are now being published into a series of photo/poetry books. Here is an example: "Abandoned Buckboard"

THOUGHTS? COMMENTS?
A LITTLE BACKGROUND: I've been taking pictures sin... (show quote)

I love the photo, and I thoroughly enjoyed your poetry, the story it told, and the emotions and memories both evoked. I won't pass another old wagon here in Texas without thinking of it. Keep photographing, keep writing, keep sharing, and most of all keep enjoying what you do! Thank you for sharing!

Reply
Mar 16, 2024 23:11:14   #
User ID
 
joecichjr wrote:
The cemetery seems to be bigger than the whole town πŸ€πŸ€”πŸ€

Think about that. Makes sense. But otherwise just yet another cliched nightscape, frequently reposted by those who know very little else of photographys grand spectrum. Yawwwwwwn. Maybe some synchophant will write another Spoon River "inspired" by that graveyard.

Reply
 
 
Mar 17, 2024 02:43:05   #
Thorny Devil Loc: Alice Springs, Central Australia
 
Thank you for sharing your story, your photo and your poetry Lionsgate. I like what you are doing. I have been tryig to take more notice of why a sene attracts my attention in the hope that I can improve my photography journey.

Reply
Mar 17, 2024 07:18:57   #
gailj Loc: Fulton IL
 
Lionsgate wrote:
A LITTLE BACKGROUND: I've been taking pictures since 1958 when my grandmother bought me my first camera, a Kodak Brownie Hawkeye. I like to think that those simple beginnings brought me to where I am today. I currently sell my work domestically and internationally through two websites. I'm self-trained but have taken a class here and there on lighting techniques and darkroom operations. With the dawn of digital imaging, I have left the darkroom in favor of digital editing.

THE EMOTION OF PHOTOGRAPHY: I now have the time (I'm retired) to travel and explore with my cameras. While I have been known to take more than 5,000 photos in a single day, I try to be selective with my scenes. The only time I take a large number of shots is when photographing wildlife. That said, I have spent hours in a single location; shooting from different angles and changing light. The overriding factor in this is how I felt about the scene. What was I thinking, feeling, and remembering while I viewed the subject? There is a line in the Star Trek IV "The Voyage Home" where the testing computer asks Spock "How do you feel?" That is how I approach my photography. I take notes about the scene and what I was feeling and why I stopped to take those photos. I do the same thing in post-production processing. What I felt plays a part in how I crop the scene and adjust the lighting.
Last year I began writing stories and poetry to mate with my photographs. All of those works have been copyrighted and are now being published into a series of photo/poetry books. Here is an example: "Abandoned Buckboard"

THOUGHTS? COMMENTS?
A LITTLE BACKGROUND: I've been taking pictures sin... (show quote)


I love it ☺️

Reply
Mar 17, 2024 09:43:30   #
Mwilliamsphotography Loc: Royal Oak Michigan & Palm Harbor Florida
 
Lionsgate wrote:
The example is readable and is 1200 x 1800. I'm not sure why this is an issue.


It isn't. One only need go to the view header in your web browser and "Zoom In, maybe twice depending on your screen.

On an iPad or tablet, just zoom in with your fingers. Same for a smart phone.

I read your poem and it was moving ... no pun intended.

Reply
Mar 17, 2024 14:32:28   #
CanonPrinter1 Loc: West Michigan
 
Fantastic. I wish I had your creative ability

Reply
Page <<first <prev 4 of 6 next> last>>
If you want to reply, then register here. Registration is free and your account is created instantly, so you can post right away.
Main Photography Discussion
UglyHedgehog.com - Forum
Copyright 2011-2024 Ugly Hedgehog, Inc.