Sunday, November 29, 2020

Photography, inspiration and a pandemic

Well, what a year it's been so far! Life during a global pandemic has certainly thrown up a lot of challenges, restrictions and changes that are still taking us, as a species, time to adjust to and adapt to as the "new norm".

I guess i was one of the lucky ones, in that I was already more of an introvert and spent most of my time either alone or around a small number of people.  That and my "day job" switched me to be working from home, so my Mon-Fri is pretty much normal; well, as normal as anything can be in all this.

Now, as anyone who's read any of my previous posts (meanderings) will know, I've been spending a lot of time being introspective. Yeah, yeah, I'm being a little "light" one the whole introspective thing; there's been a lot, but as long as you still retain some level of creativity, it's not a bad thing. Just resist the urge to let it paralyze your creativity. Over-thinking can really do a downer on creating anything. What it has done for me is to allow me a means to strip away the un-needed. To realize that I need to be myself, not try to imitate others and go with my "view" of the world around me. No one sees things quite the same as I do, as my eyes and brain process information uniquely; and yours is unique to you. Add to that my own personal aesthetics, such as selective focus and shallow depth of field, which you may or may not like. 

While 2020 may not go down as one of my most productive years image-wise, it certainly won't go down as my least productive. But what it will be marked as, is a year where I spent the most time working with just one camera and lens combo, and trying to instill/capture a feeling or emotion in the picture. While it is "easy" to produce a technically good photo, unless it has the ability to impart a feeling or emotion into the viewer, it is just a snap shot.

I have travelled a little bit this year, but the majority of the photos I've shot have been in and around the house and garden. And yes, there have been quite a few doggy portraits as their expressions are fun to capture. Some of my personal favorites have been shot on rainy days; and my "keeper" count has crept up a bit more. I'll add a few here for you to enjoy: