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photography

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Photography is an Act, Not a Profession

Being able to please a client and being able to capture images you’re proud of are two very different things. Making interesting images with a DSLR and making interesting images with your phone are not two very different things. Telling a captivating story without a client or a journalism

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Is Total Automation the Future of Cameras?

Yep. That’s always been the goal. And, it may serve artists particularly well. Jason Kottke gives his take [http://kottke.org/13/07/the-era-of-constant-photography] on some recent articles about how a next generation camera might work: > “You hold the camera in front of something, take a video or

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Support Your Local Photographer

A few recent posts have me thinking about support among photographers. From Stella Kramer [http://www.stellakramer.com/2013/06/24/support-shouldnt-it-be-a-two-way-street/] (via A Photo Editor [http://www.aphotoeditor.com/2013/07/08/support-shouldn%E2%80%99t-it-be-a-two-way-street/] ): > “Have you contributed to other photographer’s projects? As much as I

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Photography is Not About Technique

Alex Furman [https://medium.com/click-the-shutter/9cfbf7aea1f0] writes about why everyone can and should practice photography: > “Photography, mostly, is not about technique. It requires technique, but technique is also the easy part and it; alone, won’t get you anywhere.” I’ve spent the last month devouring technique-related photography

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Does Gear Add to the Enjoyment of Photography?

Question: (edited for length) “For most of us, photography is a hobby. I suspect, when it comes to many people, the gear provides a lot of the enjoyment of photography. Isn’t that what it’s supposed to be about as amateur photography - enjoyment? The other thing I haven’

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Live First

The BBC reports [http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-22999245] on a trend brought up years ago in the A Lesser Photographer Manifesto: > “The habit of taking photographs, usually with our phones, of anything and everything is everywhere - instead of enjoying things or engaging in them, there is

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Why Our Photos Are So Forgettable

From Ian Brown [http://m.theglobeandmail.com/life/humanity-takes-millions-of-photos-every-day-why-are-most-so-forgettable/article12754086/?service=mobile] (via @docdez [https://twitter.com/docdez]): > “This spring, I was an adjudicator of the 2013 Banff Mountain Film and Book Festival photography competition. This week, my three fellow judges – all professional photographers and curators – and I announced

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The Perfect Explanation for the Proliferation of Bad Professional Photography

Digging through some quotes I had stored in Evernote, I found this little gem in a tough love article [http://blog.penelopetrunk.com/2009/02/06/how-to-build-a-career-as-an-artist/#] for artists looking to go pro: > “The only difference between artists making money and artists not making money is that the first

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Putting It Very Crudely Creativity Is The

> “Putting it very crudely, creativity is the ability to play. And, to be able to turn that facility on and off when necessary. This makes perfect sense to me. Everything I’ve ever written, created or discovered artistically has come out of playing.” —Ricky Gervais [http://www.rickygervais.com/

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Charlie Rescued Me from Landscapes

My whole photographic life has been spent mostly on landscapes. It's the most challenging area of photography, because it gets harder by the day to express yourself in new ways in the same places. Recently, I've come to peace with the fact that I'm

Charlie Rescued Me from Landscapes