Monday, December 5, 2011

Can't I live without this photo

Just saw a photographer post in an open group forum asking how one selects their photos. I'm sure he was looking to get technical responses, but me being me, I responded -I ask myself  "Can I live without this photo?" Sure, that's a meaningless, ignorant repsonse =). This simple question, just really really inspired my first blog post. hahah But out of all seriousness, I take note of all the properly exposed, composed shots from a technical stand-point and make a decision from there. Does this image meet technical standards? Will this image serve it's purpose? I apply this to all genres of photography that I shoot. It really got me thinking about some of my own images. There are some images that I own that aren't exactly spectacular or technically correct, but they have a big impact on me; so much that I revisit them again and again. For the past two weeks, there is a particular image of mine that I have re-visited that has impacted me. This is an image from August.

Melrose Ave. -  Zoe W. @ Wunder Management LA

Love this shot, one of my favorites from the whole shoot. There is a lot to say about this image from a technical stand point. Backdrop is a little busy, composition could have been better and there are a few distracting elements in this photo: the couple in the background and the hideous Lincoln Town Car, red Toyota Camry in the back. You can also ask yourself, what does this image tell me? What is the subject in this photo doing and why is it significant. Why is she posing like that? Initially, I overlooked this image and went on to the next. There were and are better composed photos from the shoot. Trust me, I cropped this photo in each and every way and it took away from the mood. This is one of those in-between shots you capture when you're not really trying. There is some pre-production behind this image, but the image itself makes it look so effortless, spontaneous. In regards to post edit, I'm a sucker for warm, muted tones and felt that it was appropriate and adds a little bit of my personal style to it. This image is a great example of what I love capturing. These are the type of images that mean the most to me.

3 comments:

  1. Zoe, lost in a moment separated from the environment reaching for the memorie of why she is there emits the temperature to the scene caught by the back. Zoe took the picture presented here by the whirlwind of intentions that lead to its creation. Zoe the master, all else, people/matter are puppets. The car dosnt matter the pedestrians of no consiquence to the composition as all are lost to the look in the subjects disposition. This isn't a picture, it's a memorie come to life and even Zoe dosnt know. Barry Biddle motivostudios.com

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  2. Barry, thanks for reading my post. I'm glad you can see the picture the same way I do, except you put it in better words! - Josh

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