If you want to be part of a small group of photographers all inspiring each other to become better, then the next Focus and Frame Cohort might be just the ticket for you. No egos, no gatekeeping, just a team in your corner helping you on your journey through photography. Next intake is open and the cohort starts w/c 12th August Click here for more info: www.thephotographiceye.info/focus-frame-cohort
For years I've been taking pictures without a camera. It usually happens when I'm driving and can't safely stop to grab my gear. I snap pictures in my mind noting scenes as I speed by... red barns and wandering fences, backgrounds with mountains and clouds, great lighting, and unique compositions. I tell myself that I'll someday return, but I never do. It's just a fun exercise. .... thanks for the video !
I've been a working pro for over 40 years. To all those starting out, thinking of starting out, or just 'like to take pictures'. THIS video is what you should watch. Thanks mate. Great ideas and video. Two things I would add to his great suggestions. 1) After taking his advice and start seeing these things, the next step is: TURN AROUND. You'd be amazed at what you may be missing. And 2) Take a knee. It changes perspective and can turn a 'good' photo into a great one.
I want to clear that how to get that eye of a photographer, how to get those great shots every time anywhere, anytime, and make every scene a great, so how to get that photographer eye because i am starting out now, and i have recently purchased a camera, so how i would start to see world like that. Pls reply sir as you are a way experienced 🙏😄
Excellent tips. Here’s one as a variant/extension to #1. When I started in photography (35+ years ago) for the first years I carried a frame for a 35mm or 6x6 slide with me almost all the time. By holding it up in front of your eye, you start to develop ideas for framing and composition of scenes, without having a camera with you. With some practice you can emulate the different fields of view of your lenses by varying the distance to your eye. The slide frame fits in almost every pocket…
You are so right. I also write down ideas into a small booklet and spend a lot of time studying my unsatisfaying pictures and develop ideas to make better pictures. All these thoughts go deep into the subconsciousness and vanish sooner or later from the consciousness, but when a nice subject with a great potential appears even at the edge of my field of vision while walking through nature, the idea immediately and clearly pops up out of the subconsciousness, even if many years have passed by since I had that thought. Then I immediately know what to do. However, this works only when I am fully relaxed and not thinking about workaday trouble and other worries.
Good stuff. Mom used to say, “if you’re bored, you must be boring!” I’m 63 now, and for more than fifty years I’ve been looking through one lens or another, always trying to capture what others don’t see. Mom’s 85, and never bored 😁
@georgebrudos3068 I want to clear that how to get that eye of a photographer, how to get those great shots every time anywhere, anytime, and make every scene a great, so how to get that photographer eye because i am starting out now, and i have recently purchased a camera, so how i would start to see world like that. Pls reply sir as you are a way experienced 🙏😄
@@Manan-xe3yv The best advice I could give someone just starting out is to become aware of a few fundamentals. Composition, including the Rule of Thirds, the golden ratio (or Fibonacci spiral) and the relationship between positive and negative space are each important to learning how to see and frame the photo before ever reaching for the camera. Study contrast, and how light works - how it strikes objects, how it’s reflected, and how the color of lighting affects the mood of your images. Learn about color, and the color wheel. Watching this and other videos like is helpful for me, but my number one rule is, never go anywhere without the camera in a state of readiness! Thanks to @ThePhotographicEye for this video!
It was Ansel Adams' landscapes that inspired my B&W affliction but it was HCB's subject matter that made me want to be a documentary shooter. I was fortunate, late in life, to spend a decade (1998-2008) as a newspaper shooter. One of the most fun jobs I ever had! I got to go play every day!
I go a lot to Budapest. This is a beautiful city for photography. I walk around and just sit down somewhere and start to look around. More and more interesting compositions pop up when I let the environment enter my eyes.
Once you start doing this you can’t stop haha. I’ll squint my eyes, close one eye, use my fingers as a frame and sometimes imagine what things would look like in my head as if I’m gonna take a photo. I love it because you see the world in this whole new perspective.
I do this all day, and especially when out walking, driving, or shopping ... It drives the wife mad, but it always amazes her if I show her a shot of the most mundane of things, and even more so when I think in black and white, or explain how a shot would look in Infrared.
An exercise for a boring day at home. Grab a prime lens and don't put any thought into the selection, just put it on your camera. Then walk around the house and try to see your usual stuff in different ways. Try to turn the mundane into something else by looking at it differently. It's fun and it's amazing some of the images we can turn out.
I am really enjoying going back and watching your earlier videos, Alex, as a particular subject of interest manifests itself. I am pleased to have discovered your channel.
Good advice indeed. I cut out a small rectangle (2x3 format that I shoot) out of a piece of mat and hold it before my eyes, move it around, bring it in closer and farther, and practice framing images for composition and that helped me a great deal. Thanks for your videos...I've watched quite a few.
It's called a viewing card and it is the least expensive item you will ever buy or make for photography and I GUARANTEE that sitting in your chair looking around zoom in and out you will find photos you have never seen. Ernst Haas used to have his Yosemite students stand in one spot and find 10 images.
There are a lot of times when I'll be in the kitchen making breakfast, waiting for the coffee to brew and I'll just stand and observe when and where mundane household objects cast their shadow, timing the rhythm of the dripping tap, or how the light through the dirty windows gives them an aged character. Some days I just take the camera down and spend five minutes outside exploring. Creativity is a good way of starting the day, the caffeine just tops it off. We are surrounded by opportunity, but that window is so small and often lost forever. We take so much for granted in life, that we never see the greatness in the simplicity of the things that surround us. Big things grow from small seeds, and observation is the greatest food a creative mind needs.
Thank you for these kinds of videos. I'm newer to photography and see this mindset of you either have it from the start or you don't ("the eye'), but the way you explain how you explain it makes it clear to me it's 100% something that can and will develop if you put the proper work and love into it.
I'm a beginning photographer, at least when it comes to speaking and thinking in terms of aperture, ISO, shutter speed, etc- or even interchangeable lenses. But have been shooting pics for years with a long-reach Canon P&S and 'playing photographer' while taking some halfway decent images and even enjoying many of my very unprofessional shots of fun subjects or weird perspectives. It's just my fidget to maintain sanity and has also given my a precious visual diary of the last couple decades. But I've always thought as an artist, it's always been a fascinating game to me. I judge and award each scene I encounter or image I capture with unspecific points for subject, color, composition, mood, story, pattern, texture. My own amateur and unapologetic criteria. So much fun and I play even when without a camera- always hunting with my eye for those potential sparks of beauty or interest. makes me thankful for even the moments I can't keep. I finally got a mirrorless Fujifilm and a zoom to chase birds, squirrels, trees and flowers. So much FUN though I barely know how to run it yet!
wow i've been doing this all along! When i go out places and don't bring my camera with me, i use my phone's camera to train my eye and my composition. Then when i take a shot that i really like, i'll go back with my film camera or digital camera and take photos. Although most of the times my phone shots are good enough in quality too, but sometimes it is better to retrace those steps with a camera!
Like you hinted at, photograph what is near you. I've been "hinting" the same thing to many other photographers for years. After enjoying an ice cream, I turned around to get a great photo at a local shop.
Love your videos so much. I love that you showcase so many different images by so many different photographers. I admit that I still have large books in my bookcase that are solely compilations of great photos and they have always brought me joy as well as helping keep my own creative juices flowing. Your videos and tips bring that same feeling out in me. So thankyou. Your work here is very much appreciated.
I’m 73. The older EyE gets, the more EyE’m drawn to the beauty in the mundane, the small essential sights I’ve miss takenly passed by most of my life, blinded by the more “magnificent”. Nowadays I find myself focused on cracks/well worn patterns on sidewalks, partial pipe protruding portions, the rustier, the better, proportions of ordinary people posing ordinary captures….. don’t know how I missed all of this, EyE must have been blind ~ 👁️
I have been kind of in a rut for a while. This past month, I have been picking up a camera every time I leave the house. Just trying to make myself actually think and do photography.
I’m in the midst of a 6 week photography challenge via an instagram contact. 3 photos in 3 hours type of thing, and after uploading my 3 chosen for this week, I looked at them and thought, ‘have I advanced with my photography or am I still taking somewhat boring images’? I’ve jotted notes from your video Alex and will give this a run over Christmas! Thankyou!
Deep and thorough analytical thoughts, thank you, with numerous aspects beeing considered to be put into my own daily based photographical philosophy... as I would say in Norwegian...
I am going to take a guided tour. The dilemma I have is I want to be wowed and not spoiled, but I also need to prepare and have some idea what the place look like so I have a better chance to take the photo I want.
@@ThePhotographicEye Hi Alex Thank you for your kind reply. This video has been a light bulb moment for me, It's really opened my eyes to photographic possibilities in as you say The mundane scenes around us. As lovely as the glorious photos we see on social media are, I feel that they kind of trick you into thinking that you will only get amazing photos by visiting places of interest with expensive cameras. It's certainly opened my "Photographic Eye" I'm currently binge watching your previous posts. Many Thanks Paul
@@pauldickinson1434 Yeah, there are oppertunities all around us for photos. I'm really pleased to hear that you're starting to see the world in a different way after watching these videos.
As hyper as people are these days, it is a great thing to be able to be able to learn to focus on things for a longer time. Take something, a salt shaker, for example, and force yourself to examine it and for five minutes list everything possible about it. Do that to something else. But force yourself to five minutes of concentrating on just that thing, nothing else. Once that becomes a habit, you would be surprised at how easily it becomes to do, and should help you frame up shots more quickly….
Been watching your vids for a while and whenever I go out for regular everyday events I look around to see things and sometimes my wife asks what I am looking at and I reply just things to photograph, she is getting it now after she sees my photos.
Lesson 1: Taking photographs is not something you are born with. Seeing things differently takes training. And exausting that muscle requires PROLONG practise. When you buy a new camera, spending 1000's of dollars, you must be willing to NOT exaust the creative muscle but to take it on a learning journey. Train it. Be kind to it. Lesson 2: Take a moment to look around you to see beyond what your eye can see. So see how you can interestingly put the photo forward. Can you photograph it in an interesting way? The more you do this, the more you are training your eye (rather brain) to see possibilities. This thinking requires you to explore. Lesson 3: Capturing the Fleeting Moment: Henry Cartier-Bressons book Decisive Moment discusses further on capturing the "fleeting moment" in a photograph. It's about understanding where you are and thereby expanding that understanding to anticipate what WOULD happen in future. Waiting for that to perform a capture. Oberse the scenario. Are you expesting silence in a train station? Do you know the train schedule? Therefore lesson -1 + lesson 2 gives LOOKING + AWARENESS. This creates oppertunities and thereby creating what we call "LUCK"
I kinda regret the fact that I didnt bring a camera and take a photo of one of the buildings in the base yesterday.. there was a good fog last night and some sort of lamp by the exit door.. with a person walking towards me in the dark. it feels like a dark movie but it was def a good sight to see.
Notice how people get on the elevator while others step off. The elevator arrives, the people exit and some get on. Absorbing this rich timeflow will make you a better photographer for when that decisive moment-the derelict passed out in a dewey meadow- where your art is birthed.
I'm not sure what that image beginning at 8:50 is supposed to tell me, or make me think of, but I don't find it a decent or compelling image at all. Am I not "getting it"
Sometimes make a "thought picture" and it's enough, not take a real picture of that idea. But such nonexistent photo can also influence your future vision.
Many of us live nowhere near a bustling metropolis anything like NYC or London, so the Meyerowitz/Winogrand/HCB approach isn't necessarily practical (relatively few excel in street photography). However, we all live near potential subjects that may be relatively unique, and noticing what's potentially special about what most consider to be mundane (or fail to notice at all) can form the basis for truly great images.
Personally, I don't feel the need to categorize genres of any art form, but "street photography" is a well-recognized term and I was merely pointing out that, wherever you are, there are opportunities to produce unique and special images, so people need to embrace that rather than wishing they were someplace more "interesting." Great photographers don't need great locations to produce great photos! in fact, an excellent exercise is to deliberately limit where you shoot and what gear you use to "force creativity." The vast majority of HCB's and Winogrand's images utilized a Leica rangefinder and 50mm (I'd go crazy if I were limited to that view of the world).
creating photograph sketches before and just getting your ideas ahead of time and tuning into the moments as well. Did you ever practice these things if you weren’t working in photography, full-time ? I just am curious I think it’s my mind. but does everyone have trouble transitioning like you said, if you don’t do it full-time how do you do it part-time just slowing down of everything and the meditative nature of that is hard if you’re not devoting your full-time hours to it but it’s not impossible, right?
Yet, he took tons of pictures which are to a good amount much, much more compelling than most of street photography you see on instagram nowadays. I think he took so much great pictures not DESPITE being constraint by film but very much BECAUSE of being constraint by film. Photographers back then had to put thought into every shot. And it shows. This is not the case anymore with dslrs. Quite the opposite. Theres tons of trash pictures taken and published every day and a lot of photographers are obsessed with shuttering away so much, they dont even have the time and patience to put some thought into their frame. Maybe they catch a decisive moment from time to time, but they dont truly search for it. Digital is a curse and a blessing.
As a professional photographer, I feel like I need to push back your first sentence. I don't "practice my photography" as much as I'd like. That's mainly due to work commitments taking up my time. This includes shooting (lots of video too) and it also included editing and admin work. When I had a regular job, I feel like I had much more time to practice on weekends and after working hours during the week.
Love your videos but the AI generated stock footage is super unerving and cheapens your work. It’s especially horrible because it’s contrasted against the beautiful real life photos you use as reference. I feel like the AI stuff belongs on a different channel .But love your work .. just a suggestion about the AI stuff cause it’s so off putting.
Boring times? Wtf are talking about grany? China, Iran, North Korea and Russia start world war against west and u think bout how to spend boring time with some playing in head?
Unpopular opinion: everything you said, sound so gibberish to me. How you feel about a picture is pretty subjective and a lot of the pictures you shared here are average at best. I see why some people like them also others who would roll their eyes. You can frame any theory on your mind, when you test that theory, some pictures are going to be nice, most would be garbage. There’s definitely spontaneity involved in all the pictures taken.
I do this, and sometimes, it gets on my nerves because I'm always looking for leading lines, complimentary colors, and opportunities for bokeh. I mean, I'm happy that it's what I see, but it gets in the way of enjoying life sometimes, especially when I see something that bothers the OCD.
If you want to be part of a small group of photographers all inspiring each other to become better, then the next Focus and Frame Cohort might be just the ticket for you.
No egos, no gatekeeping, just a team in your corner helping you on your journey through photography. Next intake is open and the cohort starts w/c 12th August
Click here for more info: www.thephotographiceye.info/focus-frame-cohort
For years I've been taking pictures without a camera. It usually happens when I'm driving and can't safely stop to grab my gear. I snap pictures in my mind noting scenes as I speed by... red barns and wandering fences, backgrounds with mountains and clouds, great lighting, and unique compositions. I tell myself that I'll someday return, but I never do. It's just a fun exercise. .... thanks for the video !
If we actually had those photos... there wouldn't be room in the house for us to live. I catch myself doing this also. It makes the day more fun.
I thought I was the only weirdo who does that!
The same for me. Morning light on the drive to work.
Same
Me too!!
And to tell you the truth…. This habit will safe us from getting senile dementia….. a mind which is constantly involved doesn’t get rusted!!!
I've been a working pro for over 40 years. To all those starting out, thinking of starting out, or just 'like to take pictures'. THIS video is what you should watch. Thanks mate. Great ideas and video. Two things I would add to his great suggestions. 1) After taking his advice and start seeing these things, the next step is: TURN AROUND. You'd be amazed at what you may be missing. And 2) Take a knee. It changes perspective and can turn a 'good' photo into a great one.
I want to clear that how to get that eye of a photographer, how to get those great shots every time anywhere, anytime, and make every scene a great, so how to get that photographer eye because i am starting out now, and i have recently purchased a camera, so how i would start to see world like that.
Pls reply sir as you are a way experienced 🙏😄
Excellent tips. Here’s one as a variant/extension to #1. When I started in photography (35+ years ago) for the first years I carried a frame for a 35mm or 6x6 slide with me almost all the time. By holding it up in front of your eye, you start to develop ideas for framing and composition of scenes, without having a camera with you. With some practice you can emulate the different fields of view of your lenses by varying the distance to your eye. The slide frame fits in almost every pocket…
Great idea, I need to try this.
@@johntravena119just use phone camera nowadays
You are so right. I also write down ideas into a small booklet and spend a lot of time studying my unsatisfaying pictures and develop ideas to make better pictures. All these thoughts go deep into the subconsciousness and vanish sooner or later from the consciousness, but when a nice subject with a great potential appears even at the edge of my field of vision while walking through nature, the idea immediately and clearly pops up out of the subconsciousness, even if many years have passed by since I had that thought. Then I immediately know what to do. However, this works only when I am fully relaxed and not thinking about workaday trouble and other worries.
Good stuff. Mom used to say, “if you’re bored, you must be boring!” I’m 63 now, and for more than fifty years I’ve been looking through one lens or another, always trying to capture what others don’t see. Mom’s 85, and never bored 😁
Love that!
@georgebrudos3068 I want to clear that how to get that eye of a photographer, how to get those great shots every time anywhere, anytime, and make every scene a great, so how to get that photographer eye because i am starting out now, and i have recently purchased a camera, so how i would start to see world like that.
Pls reply sir as you are a way experienced 🙏😄
@@Manan-xe3yv The best advice I could give someone just starting out is to become aware of a few fundamentals. Composition, including the Rule of Thirds, the golden ratio (or Fibonacci spiral) and the relationship between positive and negative space are each important to learning how to see and frame the photo before ever reaching for the camera. Study contrast, and how light works - how it strikes objects, how it’s reflected, and how the color of lighting affects the mood of your images. Learn about color, and the color wheel. Watching this and other videos like is helpful for me, but my number one rule is, never go anywhere without the camera in a state of readiness!
Thanks to @ThePhotographicEye for this video!
It was Ansel Adams' landscapes that inspired my B&W affliction but it was HCB's subject matter that made me want to be a documentary shooter. I was fortunate, late in life, to spend a decade (1998-2008) as a newspaper shooter. One of the most fun jobs I ever had! I got to go play every day!
I go a lot to Budapest. This is a beautiful city for photography. I walk around and just sit down somewhere and start to look around. More and more interesting compositions pop up when I let the environment enter my eyes.
“Start to think photographically” ……key to our success!!!!
Once you start doing this you can’t stop haha. I’ll squint my eyes, close one eye, use my fingers as a frame and sometimes imagine what things would look like in my head as if I’m gonna take a photo. I love it because you see the world in this whole new perspective.
I do this all day, and especially when out walking, driving, or shopping ... It drives the wife mad, but it always amazes her if I show her a shot of the most mundane of things, and even more so when I think in black and white, or explain how a shot would look in Infrared.
An exercise for a boring day at home. Grab a prime lens and don't put any thought into the selection, just put it on your camera. Then walk around the house and try to see your usual stuff in different ways. Try to turn the mundane into something else by looking at it differently. It's fun and it's amazing some of the images we can turn out.
Great video. I total agree with the chap who added that you should Turn Around. After all, half the world will be behind you.
I am really enjoying going back and watching your earlier videos, Alex, as a particular subject of interest manifests itself. I am pleased to have discovered your channel.
Thank you for watching
Good advice indeed. I cut out a small rectangle (2x3 format that I shoot) out of a piece of mat and hold it before my eyes, move it around, bring it in closer and farther, and practice framing images for composition and that helped me a great deal. Thanks for your videos...I've watched quite a few.
It's called a viewing card and it is the least expensive item you will ever buy or make for photography and I GUARANTEE that sitting in your chair looking around zoom in and out you will find photos you have never seen. Ernst Haas used to have his Yosemite students stand in one spot and find 10 images.
There are a lot of times when I'll be in the kitchen making breakfast, waiting for the coffee to brew and I'll just stand and observe when and where mundane household objects cast their shadow, timing the rhythm of the dripping tap, or how the light through the dirty windows gives them an aged character. Some days I just take the camera down and spend five minutes outside exploring. Creativity is a good way of starting the day, the caffeine just tops it off.
We are surrounded by opportunity, but that window is so small and often lost forever. We take so much for granted in life, that we never see the greatness in the simplicity of the things that surround us. Big things grow from small seeds, and observation is the greatest food a creative mind needs.
Thank you for these kinds of videos. I'm newer to photography and see this mindset of you either have it from the start or you don't ("the eye'), but the way you explain how you explain it makes it clear to me it's 100% something that can and will develop if you put the proper work and love into it.
Glad it was helpful!
I'm a beginning photographer, at least when it comes to speaking and thinking in terms of aperture, ISO, shutter speed, etc- or even interchangeable lenses.
But have been shooting pics for years with a long-reach Canon P&S and 'playing photographer' while taking some halfway decent images and even enjoying many of my very unprofessional shots of fun subjects or weird perspectives. It's just my fidget to maintain sanity and has also given my a precious visual diary of the last couple decades.
But I've always thought as an artist, it's always been a fascinating game to me.
I judge and award each scene I encounter or image I capture with unspecific points for subject, color, composition, mood, story, pattern, texture. My own amateur and unapologetic criteria.
So much fun and I play even when without a camera- always hunting with my eye for those potential sparks of beauty or interest. makes me thankful for even the moments I can't keep.
I finally got a mirrorless Fujifilm and a zoom to chase birds, squirrels, trees and flowers. So much FUN though I barely know how to run it yet!
wow i've been doing this all along! When i go out places and don't bring my camera with me, i use my phone's camera to train my eye and my composition. Then when i take a shot that i really like, i'll go back with my film camera or digital camera and take photos. Although most of the times my phone shots are good enough in quality too, but sometimes it is better to retrace those steps with a camera!
Powerful video.
I remember doing this in the past. I would sit somewhere and just watch the world. 😮😊😅
I miss those days.
I used to carry around an old metal rear mound so I could hold it up to compose pictures. It was kinda cool for practice
Like you hinted at, photograph what is near you. I've been "hinting" the same thing to many other photographers for years.
After enjoying an ice cream, I turned around to get a great photo at a local shop.
Also wanted to say sometimes I don’t even take the photos because I love enjoying seeing the moment happen in real time.
As always, great food for thought.
Love your videos so much. I love that you showcase so many different images by so many different photographers.
I admit that I still have large books in my bookcase that are solely compilations of great photos and they have always brought me joy as well as helping keep my own creative juices flowing. Your videos and tips bring that same feeling out in me. So thankyou. Your work here is very much appreciated.
Awesome, thank you
I have learned so much from you, thank you for sharing
Good tips, thank you! I'm about to make a list to take notes wherever I'll be....
These are very interesting points! Thank you.
Thank you for this wonderful video--your enthusiasm is contagious!
I like the quote from minor white, who said sit and be still with the object of your attention until it acknowledges your presence
That's awesome!
“Daaad…Turn on the sun! It’s the summer break.” So good 🤣😂🤪🤣😅
This channel is incredible. Thank you for sharing this.
Wow thank you
This is one of the most inspiring video with advices that I've seen in a very long time. And the examples of pictures you used there are excelent.
Thank you
I’m 73. The older EyE gets, the more EyE’m drawn to the beauty in the mundane, the small essential sights I’ve miss takenly passed by most of my life, blinded by the more “magnificent”. Nowadays I find myself focused on cracks/well worn patterns on sidewalks, partial pipe protruding portions, the rustier, the better, proportions of ordinary people posing ordinary captures….. don’t know how I missed all of this, EyE must have been blind ~ 👁️
The older you get, the more you find beauty in everyday life. Life doesn't have to be big and grand.
thought i was the only one, but im happy that lot's of people have done this also ❤
Thank you for sharing! It will make you a better photographer.👍😀
IT comes with experience❤
Great exercises/tips, thx for sharing, appreciate the help
Great video, another on added to my extensive library.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Anticipation is key to sports photography. Select your fstop, shutter speed and zone focus and when it happens, shoot it.
Thank you for making such amazing content on photography!
Thanks for watching
thank you. this arrived at the perfect time.
Thank you for watching
Thanks a lot Sir. Your knowledge will help help us for sure 😊 🙏
It's my pleasure
Great ideas ! The saying is: 'always bring your camera with you' as you never know when the great photo is in front of you.
I have been kind of in a rut for a while. This past month, I have been picking up a camera every time I leave the house. Just trying to make myself actually think and do photography.
I’m in the midst of a 6 week photography challenge via an instagram contact. 3 photos in 3 hours type of thing, and after uploading my 3 chosen for this week, I looked at them and thought, ‘have I advanced with my photography or am I still taking somewhat boring images’? I’ve jotted notes from your video Alex and will give this a run over Christmas! Thankyou!
Thanks for watching
Thank you. All the best. 👍👍📷😎
Brilliant excercise !!
This is very helpful, thank you.
Brilliant stuff. So simple but such useful tips.
Im inspired ❤
Deep and thorough analytical thoughts, thank you, with numerous aspects beeing considered to be put into my own daily based photographical philosophy... as I would say in Norwegian...
This is useful and inspiring, thank you!
Thank you,,
every one of your videos is a pleasure. 🙏
But this guy ALWAYS gives me inspiration. : )
Love it! 👍👍
I am going to take a guided tour. The dilemma I have is I want to be wowed and not spoiled, but I also need to prepare and have some idea what the place look like so I have a better chance to take the photo I want.
Great video
Thanks again Alex
An inspirational video Alex..
Thanks Paul - what did you like about it particularly?
@@ThePhotographicEye Hi Alex Thank you for your kind reply. This video has been a light bulb moment for me, It's really opened my eyes to photographic possibilities in as you say The mundane scenes around us. As lovely as the glorious photos we see on social media are, I feel that they kind of trick you into thinking that you will only get amazing photos by visiting places of interest with expensive cameras. It's certainly opened my "Photographic Eye"
I'm currently binge watching your previous posts.
Many Thanks Paul
@@pauldickinson1434 Yeah, there are oppertunities all around us for photos. I'm really pleased to hear that you're starting to see the world in a different way after watching these videos.
Thank you its a great session how to improve our photography ❤️❤️❤️
You topic are really logical. My biggest barrier is myself, i can't get me camera on in presence of others. Hesitation.
uniqueness out of averageness jsuch a great word catch)
4:22 beijing, andingmen nei and jiaodoukou intersection
I don't understand everything you say, because I'm French 😉. But I love your videos. well done!
It was seeing the opportunities for photographs, and the shots that i wanted to capture, that led me to pick up a camera.
Os brasileiros paulistanos que reconheceram a Luz 👍
As hyper as people are these days, it is a great thing to be able to be able to learn to focus on things for a longer time. Take something, a salt shaker, for example, and force yourself to examine it and for five minutes list everything possible about it.
Do that to something else. But force yourself to five minutes of concentrating on just that thing, nothing else.
Once that becomes a habit, you would be surprised at how easily it becomes to do, and should help you frame up shots more quickly….
3, useful 9.5mins. 1) Read books.2) keep up with Brands, 3) upload photos.
Been watching your vids for a while and whenever I go out for regular everyday events I look around to see things and sometimes my wife asks what I am looking at and I reply just things to photograph, she is getting it now after she sees my photos.
Lesson 1: Taking photographs is not something you are born with. Seeing things differently takes training. And exausting that muscle requires PROLONG practise. When you buy a new camera, spending 1000's of dollars, you must be willing to NOT exaust the creative muscle but to take it on a learning journey. Train it. Be kind to it.
Lesson 2: Take a moment to look around you to see beyond what your eye can see. So see how you can interestingly put the photo forward. Can you photograph it in an interesting way? The more you do this, the more you are training your eye (rather brain) to see possibilities. This thinking requires you to explore.
Lesson 3: Capturing the Fleeting Moment: Henry Cartier-Bressons book Decisive Moment discusses further on capturing the "fleeting moment" in a photograph. It's about understanding where you are and thereby expanding that understanding to anticipate what WOULD happen in future. Waiting for that to perform a capture. Oberse the scenario. Are you expesting silence in a train station? Do you know the train schedule?
Therefore lesson -1 + lesson 2 gives LOOKING + AWARENESS. This creates oppertunities and thereby creating what we call "LUCK"
I feel like I would take more photos if I had smaller gear. I have a Canon 5DM4 so it’s quite heavy with a lens on.
Occasional acts today that would be good to make consistent habits!
I kinda regret the fact that I didnt bring a camera and take a photo of one of the buildings in the base yesterday.. there was a good fog last night and some sort of lamp by the exit door.. with a person walking towards me in the dark. it feels like a dark movie but it was def a good sight to see.
Always take WAAAAAY better pictures with my eye/mind than I EVER do with the bloody camera!
Ended up going mad while doing a 365 project. I got so overwhelmed I had to stop.
Are you originally from south Africa sir ? I love hearing "howsit howsit".
I'm originally from the UK, but grew up in SA from 84 till around 99
@@ThePhotographicEye once a saffer always a saffer
Notice how people get on the elevator while others step off. The elevator arrives, the people exit and some get on. Absorbing this rich timeflow will make you a better photographer for when that decisive moment-the derelict passed out in a dewey meadow- where your art is birthed.
I'm not sure what that image beginning at 8:50 is supposed to tell me, or make me think of, but I don't find it a decent or compelling image at all. Am I not "getting it"
More about anticipation and recognising that the moment was going to happen. That said, I agree, it's not a good photo - more of a snapshot.
Sometimes make a "thought picture" and it's enough, not take a real picture of that idea. But such nonexistent photo can also influence your future vision.
Many of us live nowhere near a bustling metropolis anything like NYC or London, so the Meyerowitz/Winogrand/HCB approach isn't necessarily practical (relatively few excel in street photography). However, we all live near potential subjects that may be relatively unique, and noticing what's potentially special about what most consider to be mundane (or fail to notice at all) can form the basis for truly great images.
“Street Photography” really is a made up term only used for selling things. It’s meaningless otherwise.
Personally, I don't feel the need to categorize genres of any art form, but "street photography" is a well-recognized term and I was merely pointing out that, wherever you are, there are opportunities to produce unique and special images, so people need to embrace that rather than wishing they were someplace more "interesting." Great photographers don't need great locations to produce great photos! in fact, an excellent exercise is to deliberately limit where you shoot and what gear you use to "force creativity." The vast majority of HCB's and Winogrand's images utilized a Leica rangefinder and 50mm (I'd go crazy if I were limited to that view of the world).
How to learn?
creating photograph sketches before and just getting your ideas ahead of time and tuning into the moments as well.
Did you ever practice these things if you weren’t working in photography, full-time ?
I just am curious I think it’s my mind. but does everyone have trouble transitioning like you said, if you don’t do it full-time how do you do it part-time just slowing down of everything and the meditative nature of that is hard if you’re not devoting your full-time hours to it but it’s not impossible, right?
Cartier-Bresson didn’t have a dslr. He had a set number of shots per film canister…hence the decisive moment
Yet, he took tons of pictures which are to a good amount much, much more compelling than most of street photography you see on instagram nowadays. I think he took so much great pictures not DESPITE being constraint by film but very much BECAUSE of being constraint by film. Photographers back then had to put thought into every shot. And it shows. This is not the case anymore with dslrs. Quite the opposite. Theres tons of trash pictures taken and published every day and a lot of photographers are obsessed with shuttering away so much, they dont even have the time and patience to put some thought into their frame. Maybe they catch a decisive moment from time to time, but they dont truly search for it. Digital is a curse and a blessing.
@@dominikschreiner6062 do we know how many he took? Vivian Maier…SHE took tons of photos
Am I the only one to see this with a "photographic eye" - but are you Hugh Grant's twin by any chance?
8:55 hope that didn't leave a nasty mark. 😬
next try to zoom in and see the details..
💪❤️💪
"Unless you are a pro, you probably don't have enough time..." (or a retired geezer whose primary responsibility is walking your dog in the Rockies)
the more you look, the more you see.
As a professional photographer, I feel like I need to push back your first sentence. I don't "practice my photography" as much as I'd like. That's mainly due to work commitments taking up my time. This includes shooting (lots of video too) and it also included editing and admin work. When I had a regular job, I feel like I had much more time to practice on weekends and after working hours during the week.
Sometimes being a photographer is knowing when NOT to.. Irishpeteeboy : )
Love your videos but the AI generated stock footage is super unerving and cheapens your work. It’s especially horrible because it’s contrasted against the beautiful real life photos you use as reference. I feel like the AI stuff belongs on a different channel .But love your work .. just a suggestion about the AI stuff cause it’s so off putting.
Come to Islam n success
Boring times? Wtf are talking about grany? China, Iran, North Korea and Russia start world war against west and u think bout how to spend boring time with some playing in head?
Unpopular opinion: everything you said, sound so gibberish to me. How you feel about a picture is pretty subjective and a lot of the pictures you shared here are average at best. I see why some people like them also others who would roll their eyes. You can frame any theory on your mind, when you test that theory, some pictures are going to be nice, most would be garbage. There’s definitely spontaneity involved in all the pictures taken.
I do this, and sometimes, it gets on my nerves because I'm always looking for leading lines, complimentary colors, and opportunities for bokeh. I mean, I'm happy that it's what I see, but it gets in the way of enjoying life sometimes, especially when I see something that bothers the OCD.