Blimey! I completely disagree with it!I agree with all of Bachs post, especially the portion quoted above.... I don't really give a hoot wether they sell or not anymore or even if they gain acceptance from fellow photographers, as long as I get some satisfaction from them.
What a wonderful place! Where was / is it, please?![]()
This photo is probably my favourite ... but it was more about when and where it was taken. It's a personal thing!
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What a wonderful place! Where was / is it, please?
Stroller.
You have to Love your photos.
Photography is art and art is always a labour of love. If you have no emotional attachment to the images I can't see how you can work with them.
Of course I'm talking about shooting for pleasure here (not commercial or weddings). Do you never get that moment when you look through the viewfinder and think, wow - that's a picture! ??
You might get back home and realize that your shot has not really captured the WOW - but thats just a matter of refining your technique and practice. But if you have no love for your art - that's a sad thing.
For me - If I shoot something, but don't get around to taking it off the camera and processing it - I can lose some of the enthusiasm for the shot, simply because some of the feeling has dissipated over time. So I try to work my shots up as soon as I get home while the feeling is fresh - I try to keep the WOW in my head - I want my shots to communicate the same feelings that I had when I stood there just before I raised the camera to my eye.
Sorry to rant on and get all artsy and emotional - but there is plenty of good advice on this forum for technique and equipment etc. But not enough talk about the art and emotion of what we do and why we do it.
So I would say you need to learn to love your art - for its own sake. I admire a lot of other people's work. I even love some other people's photos - but you have to love your own, they are your own creation.
And the "Post of the Month" award goes to ...... NIGEL CAMPBELL Do you never get that moment when you look through the viewfinder and think, wow - that's a picture! ??
One of the girls who works in a customer's office told me a while back that "that looks really professional"; the occasion is memorable for me because I guess she was taken with the pic, actually looked at it for a minute or two and said it "could be professional" more than once. But in my mind that's because she "doesn't know any better" - it was a complete snapshot! Yes, it was a good snapshot, a lucky snapshot (snapshots from dSLRs tend to be better & luckier than snapshots with cheaper cameras, IMO) and a good pose (and since pets are rarely obliging, that's a matter of luck, too!), but there was so much wrong with it I can't count!I always over criticise my own pictures. My friends and loved one's think they are good,
but i am never happy with the end result. I am always looking at how i could have shot something better, lit it better etc.

It's not that I lack emotional involvement (and you've expressed that very well), it's just that I don't think they're very good.You have to Love your photos.
Photography is art and art is always a labour of love. If you have no emotional attachment to the images I can't see how you can work with them.
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But when I'm taking photographs for the pleasure of photography or because I'm trying to cultivate my "artistic talents" then I'm plenty self-critical. To have someone else buy images that I've taken, or to have them published or for a pro togger to say something nice about them... that would "validate" me, and validate my skills. It would show me that I'm not just wasting my time (actually right now I don't waste enough of it on photography, but that's another storyand prove that the photo is actually good, and it's not just me being "up on myself".
I'm sure we've all encountered someone who's images are all "perfect" and wonderful and "you couldn't have taken better, mate". That's not me - I need someone else to praise me, otherwise all my photos are all rubbish.
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