The number it doesn’t show is the number of prints I have made in the last month. Zero.
It dawned on me that shooting with the fastest camera I ever had, my iPhone, hasn’t produced many worthy (in my opinion) images. So…I decided to slow down and create a new talk called “Point-and-Shoot vs. Point-and-Meditate.”
Too many speakers are lazy and look for stock photos to use in their PowerPoint presentations. Although stock photos are available on all topics, they aren’t personal.
For example, if I were speaking about Pugs (a topic near and dear to my heart) I could find a zillion photos of Pugs to illustrate my talk. However, using the photo of P.J. would make it special. I could explain that I took it more than 25 years ago, when P.J. attended his first dog show. [He didn’t do very well that day, but did eventually become an A.K.C. champion!]
If possible, use your own photos! It will help your presentation be unique and personal.
Before we used digital cameras, we had to figure out exposure using light meters that weren’t very accurate, cameras that varied in their results, and chemicals that we had to keep at specific temperatures. Few photographers paid enough attention to the details. Fred Picker did.
Over the years he wrote a quarterly newsletter that described what he thought was the ideal way to take photos…as well as advertise equipment from his Zone VI company. The one issue of the newsletter that I remember was in April 1980, Issue #24. In it he described what he called a “Key Day.” A Key Day was the ideal sunny day without clouds. According to Fred, if you knew the setting for a key day, you could figure out the proper exposure for other outdoor scenes.
For those who shoot with digital cameras, from iPhones to DSLRs, you might want to quiz yourself on how well you can predict proper exposure settings. Take a picture. Guess what you think is the correct f/stop, shutter speed, and ISO. Then cheat…and look at the digital photo’s info, like this one. How well did you do?
Olympus announced their new TG-6 camera. They stress that it is meant for adventures, including taking it into the water. The feature that caught my eye was what they call “Microscope Modes” for extreme close-ups. For those of use who take photos of flowers and such, it sounds like a camera to look into.
The weather was great. I was in the yard. I wanted to take a photo of a flower.
Not this one.
The flower I wanted was not in a position I could get to. My iPhone didn’t do much good because of its lack of a zoom. So, I turned to a flower that was closer and took this disappointing picture.
Sorry.
Tomorrow, I’ll go back with a zoom and hope the flowers look as good.