Week 4: Surprise
This has been the hardest - so far. I had no inspiration at all. Zilch, zero, nowt.
My instinct was to take a face showing genuine surprise. By definition that's not something you can have endless goes at. Then I went round a long loop about what 'surprise' means to different people and came up no concrete answer. Ok, so what surprises me, was my next approach. Well, not much, tbh. I'm pretty laid back and not scared of spiders, snakes or blood.

And, the fatal flaw was: If I organised the photo how was it going to surprise me? Doh!
So, I've set out my pile of excuses. It's Friday and time to panic. I recalled my last really big (and very, very, very nice) surprise.
Christmas Day, we'd just got back from a family walk in the Forest and the family sat me down gently in a chair. I was worried - they usually want drinks/food/something after a walk. They all gathered round and handed me a parcel. And stood and watched. I opened it to find a 105mm 2.8 nestled in its gold box. WOW. EXACTLY what I wanted most in the whole world -
apart from a D700, that is.
Before I could say anything, another, larger parcel appeared. Mystified, I opened it and ....... surprise
... well, what would you have said? I was totally speechless, gobsmacked and close to tears. The whole family had kept this from me for weeks. The grin is still plastered to my face. Mr JG had listened to my verbal daydreams.
Clearly, I did not take this photo. Sorry, I've cheated. :shake: My son, Ian (irw1) caught the moment when his mother had nothing to say! As he says, it was a quick 'grab' shot amid chaos!
So here is my view of one of the biggest suprises of my life. Couldn't show the lens, because I was using it.
What I have learned this week:
1 When inspiration and ideas aren't there, you have to just keep on at it. Work at an idea and if that doen't lead you anywhere move on, and on and on until you do come up with something.
2 What you come up with might not be ideal. You just have to get on with it.
3 Try to learn from previous mistakes. This week I stuck to natural light and the hated tripod, but started much earlier in the day. Good job I did, because the shot took ages.
4 Natural light is a [PLEASE DON'T TRY TO BYPASS THE SWEAR FILTER]! It gets all over the place. There were enough blown highlights for a nuclear explosion.
5 All inanimate objects have an ability to be, well, like natural light (see #4 above)
6 Dogs don't help, and leave wet nose marks on everything they sniff. If you want to keep the door to the room closed one will want to go in, one will want to go out. Then they want to swap over. :bang:
7 Then it's lunch time and everybody wants feeding.
8 Controlling dof with the macro lens is interesting. I wanted the D and the 7 in focus, and I wanted the N of 'Nikon' on the front of the camera legible, but not sharp. It took dozens of shots to get what I wanted.
9 Patience is vital (see #4, 5, 6, 7 and 8 above).
10 Swapping from one camera to another is hard. Everything has to be thought about, rather than instinctive. (I used the S3Pro for the first time in a month).
11 I'm keeping fingers and toes crossed for something easier for Week 5.
Thanks for staying with me though this. If you've had the same problems, I hope it helps to know you're not alone.
C & C most welcome - my pic and Ian's!
Jean