December 18, 2009

Photographers and How They Choose Their Photographic Subjects

Taking your deep seeded desire for creating photography images is one of the really exciting assignments a photographer can get.  Whether you are going out into nature to photograph a great sunrise, a phenomenal river or to capture some other wonder of nature or if you are deciding to visit an untravelled area to take photographs that tell the story of a people, the safari nature of the trip is the same.

Safari is a different terminology for such a trip because like that hunter going into the far into the woods to hunt bear, you are going to the unknown to get that perfect photograph.  Your preparations have to be expert.  Your discipline out on the journey must be focused.  But above all, your relentless desire to go after what you went for as you hunt the prize you want to bag, nor with a big game rifle but with your digital camera.

One mistake to avoid is over packing for your adventure.  It’s easy to do because you may have the urge to bring everything in your studio “just in case”.  First of all, if you have every piece of photography equipment you own with you, the likelihood that something will get broken or stolen is pretty good.  So you have to know how to strip down your travel gear to just what you have to have to get the job done.

Do you have the understanding that if this experience is new to you?  One way is to do a few “dry runs”.  Just as you went out and did practice photographs when you learning the photography ropes, take one or two test trips to the next town.  Do these without the pressure of a deadline or a deliverable that you have to complete.  A visitor to take some random images in the furthest city a big population will come into vision what is needed and what is not.  Then do the same images over again in a different location out in the country where you may have to backpack your equipment in.  You will find out pretty fast what “stuff” is worth the extra weight and what needs to stay home.

Your photographic safari is a business trip to you and you have a mission.  But your mission is about more than just going somewhere to get a snapshot.  Just as every picture has personality and soul, the more you become part of the environment where you are traveling, the better your “eye” will be to capture the perfect photo.

Yes, you must keep your head on straight and keep the trip goal at focus and stay on schedule.  But don’t forget relax and have a good time photographing.  If you are going to take a picture of a natural wonder, like Yosemite National Park, for example, spending time visiting with other photographers going to that sight or talking to locals may surface some locations and secrets about the site that other photographers would not get if they just came, snapped a photo and left.  Use the “down time” to charm the other travelers and let them charm you.  Not only will your picture be a hundred times better, you will have a lot more fun.

Finally, as you reach your destination, your preparations need to pay off and you need to let them pay off.  Here is where focus and the eye on the target is very important.  It is so easy, especially when traveling, to get obsessive with lights, lenses and cameras, than with the set up and with your settings. 

Do all of that before you leave, or in the hotel room the night before.  On location, the session is about your subject, not your equipment.  Your equipment is there to serve you.  Don’t worry about it.  Trust yourself that you did a good job getting ready.  You have awesome camera lenses and camera bodies and you have prepared the lenses, checked the batteries and done all the right things.  It all will work when it needs to work. 

Now your mission is to focus on your subject matter.  Your all angles of your photograph to determine if it speaks to you in a different way that you know this photograph has to tell.  Here is where the artist in you works creatively with the photographer to produce a photo that you will for sure to love.  And if you obey your disciplines and get that shot, it will be a photography safari that comes home having “bagged the big one” to add to your study room for sure.

 

Author: Richard Rives, Photographer in San Antonio Texas. Visit our senior portrait gallery or our family portrait gallery

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