February 25, 2022

Sunsets

I've fiddled around some with the Sunset challenge. I don't have anything earth-shattering yet, but I do have a few to review.

This one is my favorite so far - my neighbor's flying pig! I think it's cheeky! (And I like the moon up in the corner.)

Since I live in the city, it's difficult to get an unobstructed view. I did get a few nice shots out at the farm over Christmas with my brother's iPhone.


Tonight I experimented with taking some abstract style shots through the trees. First off, though, colors were gorgeous tonight!

I got one abstract that I like:

Then I took one of these and inverted colors, and I like the texture of it.

Challenge card:

February 12, 2022

Door Knob

Photo Challenge: Photograph a Door (Knob)

I took this one in 2010 while on the Artist Studio Tour.


Texture

Photograph Texture: This is the bucket of my wheelbarrow after rain stood in it for a while and then rust spots (or something!) started to form. I've always like this picture.  2010

 


The "before" picture - ha ha!


Lone Tree


Shuffling through the Lightbox Photograph Cards deck, there were several topics which made me recall previous photos I've taken, so I'm going to upload some of them even though I wasn't deliberately doing the challenge, lol...

I took this one at the farm with my brother's phone.




"Sharpness is a bourgeois concept."

“Sharpness is a bourgeois concept.”                                 

                                                      ~ Henri Cartier-Bresson

 Jump to 25:16 for Michael Goodlet's thoughts on this...

 

"When we come at an art from that [technical] perspective, it's very easy to get sucked into this vortex where we think that everything has an answer - and everything has a technical answer - where in fact, with photography, a lot of that answer is in how we are and what we feel

"And when we look at a photograph, at least 50% of it, probably more, is us. When we look at it, we are seeing what we feel, not what the photographer took. He just gave us that foundation, and then we applied all the feeling, all the emotion, we dragged it up out of our past and applied it to that image. And that is such an important factor in how we take our photography forward. It cannot, and it never should be, all about technical pursuits. They're merely the starting place for great photography."

    ~ Michael Goodlet