Sunday, October 31, 2010

1 Day 'til Halloween - Checking It Twice

Oops! I forgot to post 1 Day 'Til yesterday!

Isn't it typical of this crazy time of year, packed with activities, places to go and things to take care of? My intention was to post a pumpkin photo or two, but we didn't carve it yet. We didn't last year either. In fact, last year's pumpkin didn't get carved until Thanksgiving when I made it into pie!

Today's tip takes shape in list form so you can make the magic happen!



A few things to remember before the evening festivities begin.

  1. Charge your camera's battery
  2. Clear your memory cards, then Format them in your camera's menu to get the most space.
  3. Place your camera or bag next to the battery so you don't leave the battery behind (or am I the only one who does this?)
  4. Decide what lens you are going to use and if you are going to use flash. Make these decisions before you walk out the door, and stick to them so you can focus on the fun.
  5. Place your camera's drive mode on Continuous shooting so you can snap several frames at a time, it gives you the best chance of one being right!
  6. Watch your SHUTTER SPEED.  In my opinion this is often the biggest mistake I make when shooting in low light situations, heck, maybe in most situations. I forget to look at it or talk myself into believing I really can hand hold my camera for 1/20th of a second. (I can't)
  7. Have fun!
Post a link to your favorite photo in the comments below! 

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Don't forget to link me up to your photo or leave a comment and you'll go in a drawing on November 1st for a spot in Your Life: Captured Through The Lens, my most popular photography class. That means you get up to 13 chances to win! Comments close at midnight pacific time tonight.

Your Life: Captured Through The Lens is a 6 week online, interactive photography course. We start class in aperture priority mode (the A or AV on your dial) and work our way to manual mode. Each class includes a composition method as well as technical shooting information.  You'll receive 6 pdf lessons and access to 6 videos in addition to two live online chats and have access to the online forum and gallery. See what Tracy MuilenbergDebbie West, and Amy LeJeune have to say about class.

Friday, October 29, 2010

2 Days 'til Halloween - Halloween Scavenger Hunt

The excitement is boiling over in our house this morning! Ian's first school party and costume parade. He's changed his mind about his costume a few times, but I think we've settled on one for today and one for tomorrow. We'll see what Halloween brings! He's a boy of many costumes with a Grandma who likes to sew, so he's got a good stash to select from!

*TP Mummy not sewn by Grandma aka Mumzy

Today's challenge is one of my favorites! Head out with your camera for a scavenger hunt. You might find these today or throughout the entire weekend. I love the challenge of finding specific things and grabbing them in creative ways.

Here you go! 13 just for fun. Find as many (or as few) as you'd like. Link me to them when you've got some! BigHugeLabs has a fun mosaic maker, to quickly put them together.

1. A black cat
2. Teeth
3. Red - fun chance to follow The Red Rule
4. Stuffed
5. Striped
6. Spooky - maybe Shoot The Moon
7. Pointy
8. Brew
9. Orange
10. A treat - a great opportunity to Fill the Frame
11. Bones
12. Ghostly - try to Ghost Someone
13. Cute

Have fun! Happy Shooting! Be safe :)


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Link me up to your photo or leave a comment and you'll go in a drawing on November 1st for a spot in Your Life: Captured Through The Lens, my most popular photography class. That means you can get up to 13 chances to win!

Your Life: Captured Through The Lens is a 6 week online, interactive photography course. We start class in aperture priority mode (the A or AV on your dial) and work our way to manual mode. Each class includes a composition method as well as technical shooting information.  You'll receive 6 pdf lessons and access to 6 videos in addition to two live online chats and a class forum for posting questions. See what Tracy MuilenbergDebbie West, and Amy LeJeune have to say about class.

Photography Help At Your Request #1

Kim posted her photography dilemma for tomorrow morning. I'm giving her answer it's own post as I think many of you may find yourself in this spot.

Her question:
I have been asked to take a group shot of my daughter’s dance team on Saturday. I have never done anything like this before and really want to get as nice a shot as possible. I am hoping you can help me better understand what the best course will be to get the best shot. So here’s the situation. 


12 to 14 girls
High school football field (no shade, sigh) 
9 to 10 am shoot time (sigh).
I played a little bit this morning at the correct time and here is what I discovered
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A. 
Front light will get me a bunch of squinting girls but by using my M mode and light metering ( thank you so much for sharing that sweet gem on TDD) off their faces I get a pretty nicely exposed photo.
B.
Sidelight is going keep the girls from squinting but if I meter of the shaded side of their faces the sunny side is over exposed and if I meter off the sunny side the shaded side is underexposed..
C.
Backlight gets me well exposed girls, by metering off their faces, and a blown out background. 
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Everything I read online says “just don’t ” Ok now lets get real.. We can’t always be in control of these situations… I just want to do the best I can with a situation that is out of my control…
Since I don’t have the luxury of having all the girls to play with before Saturday I am seriously hoping you can give me your best advice…Is there anything else I need to be mindful of while taking a medium sized group shot .
Wishing your Life class was already underway
Group shots are difficult. Getting everyone to look at the same direction without getting eyes closed or funky faces can be tricky. You are doing the right thing by trying it out before the girls are there. Let's talk about your choices.

A.
A is a nice light choice, as you've noticed. IF you use this option, the best trick is to have everyone close their eyes tight. Look at the sun. On the count of three have them open, and using your continuous shooting mode snap several photos. You need to be fast with this and only try it a couple of times, their patience will be short!

I've used this when shooting the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society Team in Training Triathlon teams when we wanted the lake behind us leaving no choice, but to look into the sun.

B.
Sidelight is going to be uneven and while you avoid the squint, you will need to fill in the shadows with either a LARGE reflector, diffused fill flash, or lighting. This seems to be a trickier approach that takes more gear. I'm not a big fan of hauling a ton of gear if I can avoid it.

C.
Does the background matter? This is really your creative call. If you want both, you have two options.
Option 1 - If you choose to meter off the sky and shoot, you will need to use fill flash in order to expose the girls correctly. I like to play with my fill flash level before a real shoot. I would have someone stand in the spot you are going to shoot, fire off several frames and review them on your histogram to see what works best. Move your flash compensation up and down until you like what you see. Getting flash right always takes a little fiddling.
Option 2 - If you choose to shoot without a flash, expose for the girls, blowing out the background. Then without the girls in the frame, expose for the background. A little Photoshop magic and you've got a picture with both pieces well exposed.

This is not an easy situation, but definitely one many of us find ourselves in. Life goes on whether or not the light is at a perfect angle!

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Do you have a situation you'd like perspective about? Email me at katrina at katrinakennedy dot com with the details of your situation. It might just appear here!

Kim send me an email, I have a flash tutorial I'd like to send you for posting your question and kicking off our new series!

Look forward to seeing you in Your Life Captured Through The Lens. Class starts November 2nd!

Thursday, October 28, 2010

3 Days 'til Halloween - How To Shoot The Moon

Shea's favorite

When the full moon is out on Halloween, the creep factor rises.  This year it isn't full, but there is still a moon! Give it a try. Frame it.  Leave it lonely in the sky. If you get really lucky take advantage of clouds.

You might recall my steps for shooting the moon.

1. Grab your lens with the longest focal length.
2. Take off your UV filter, if you have one on.
3. Set your ISO to 100.
4. Set your aperture to f/8.0 (this is not the only option).
5. Set your shutter speed to 1/125 (this is not the only option).
6. Zoom out to your longest focal length
7. Focus on the moon, ignoring your light meter (it's going to freak out, indicating you are overexposed)
8. Recompose if you'd like.
9. Shoot!


Okay, that's one way :)


Here are my steps for these.


1. Grab your lens with the longest focal length. (I used 200mm)
2. Take off your UV filter, if you have one on.
3. Set your ISO to 1250.
4. Set your aperture to f/2.8 (the moon is a LONG way out, you'll get the entire thing in focus).
5. Set your shutter speed to 1/400 (this is not the only option).
6. Zoom out to your longest focal length
7. Focus on the moon, ignoring your light meter (it's going to freak out, indicating you are overexposed)
8. Recompose if you'd like.
9. Shoot!
10. Shoot again.

Now, take a look at the #'s in steps #3, #4 and #5. Noticed how they changed? THAT is the exposure triangle - ISO, aperture and shutter speed. THAT is how photos are made! There are always multiple combinations. 
Ian's "spooky" favorite

My favorite

Any questions? I'd love to see what spooky photos you can come up with!

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

4 Days 'til Halloween - Step To The Other Side

Its a good practice to capture photos from many different angles. Sometimes you discover unexpected treasures.

When Ian was two and a half, he loved waiting at the door for tricker treaters. He hadn't really grasped the idea that HE could go get candy at other doors!




This Halloween prepare to grab a photo from behind. Whether it is at the door as your pirate opens it for others or as your goblin rings the doorbell at your neighbors house. Simply watching them walk away is a classic perspective too. You'll get the best cooperation when they can't see what you are doing!

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Don't forget to link me up to your photo or leave a comment and you'll go in a drawing on November 1st for a spot in Your Life: Captured Through The Lens, my most popular photography class. That means you can get up to 13 chances to win!

Your Life: Captured Through The Lens is a 6 week online, interactive photography course. We start class in aperture priority mode (the A or AV on your dial) and work our way to manual mode. Each class includes a composition method as well as technical shooting information.  You'll receive 6 pdf lessons and access to 6 videos in addition to two live online chats. See what Tracy MuilenbergDebbie West, and Amy LeJeune have to say about class.

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

5 Days 'til Halloween - Diggin' Up Good Stuff

Only five days left! Are your pumpkins carved? Costumes in order? Camera batteries charged?

Today I'm taking a different approach and sending you around the web for great Halloween photography ideas.

Rebecca Cooper has a great new book at Ella Publishing and great Halloween tips post on the 1825 blog.

Digital Photography School has some great tips from last year.

More great Halloween Photography Tips at the New York Institute of Photography.

For a little low light step by step, check the Daily Digi.

PhotoTuts has a GREAT post about Mesmerising Moon Photography.

A search or two at flickr can give you TONS of ideas and inspiration!



1. halloween, 2. That's a lot of Pumpkin Pie!, 3. Advanced Happy Halloween (^ ^), 4. Web of Lights, 5. Halloween: My [second] Favorite Holiday, 6. Happy October !, 7. Pumpkin Pile, 8. bokeh pumpkins, 9. :: fairy of dreams ::

Do you have any favorite Halloween photography tips?

CreativeLive Tamara Lackey Entry from KatrinaKennedy


Here is my entry for the CreativeLive event I mentioned yesterday. I'd love to hear from you if you were a mom I've helped. Thanks!

Monday, October 25, 2010

Question About My Photo of the Day


So which would you pick?

He helped me out on a little project. Hoping to take a trip to spend time with Tamara Lackey in Seattle next month. You can join in the fun still too! It's live and it's free.

6 Days 'til Halloween - Fill The Frame

Six more days to photography the sights and sounds of Halloween!

Today, get in close. Fill the frame with your subject to leave the view NO DOUBT what your subject is. Whether your photo is a bit scary or super cute, step up closer and leave nothing but the subject in the frame. If you need to crop to do that...no problem, we won't even notice!

Check out my focus post at the DailyDigi if you are curious about just how close you can get!




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Don't forget to link me up to your photo or leave a comment and you'll go in a drawing on November 1st for a spot in Your Life: Captured Through The Lens, my most popular photography class. That means you can get up to 13 chances to win!


Your Life: Captured Through The Lens is a 6 week online, interactive photography course. We start class in aperture priority mode (the A or AV on your dial) and work our way to manual mode. Each class includes a composition method as well as technical shooting information.  You'll receive 6 pdf lessons and access to 6 videos in addition to two live online chats. See what Tracy MuilenbergDebbie West, and Amy LeJeune have to say about class.

Sunday, October 24, 2010

7 Days 'til Halloween - Not For Vampires

Holidays and events find us behind the camera taking photos of everything and everyone. But what about you? Are you in any photos or is that just too frightening?

Mirrors are the easiest classic way to get yourself in the photo. Try a little something different this time though. Don't cover your spooky self with the camera. Place the camera low and shoot into a mirror. It may take a few tries to get it right. Have fun with it, see what else you can get in the picture. Think Halloween. And you know what? You don't have to be in focus, just be in the photo!

50mm | ISO 4000 | f/1.4 | ss 1/100 

I'll assume you're a vampire if you don't take part in this challenge!

Saturday, October 23, 2010

8 Days 'til Halloween - Dig Deep

Have a little fun with perspective with your Halloween photos. Make people look bigger by shooting low and wide. The lower you go, the larger they will appear. If you shoot super wide (the smallest mm number on your lens) you can exaggerate their height even more. This is one spot where point and shoot cameras can have a great advantage over dSLRs!

So, dig deep for your Halloween shot and show us your results!


ISO 4000, f/4.0, ss 1/40

I used Matt K's Ultimate Fighter preset in Lightroom because I'm in love with Lightroom and Matt K!

Show us what you dig up!

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Don't forget to link me up to your photo or leave a comment and you'll go in a drawing on November 1st for a spot in Your Life: Captured Through The Lens, my most popular photography class. That means you can get up to 13 chances to win!

Your Life: Captured Through The Lens is a 6 week online, interactive photography course. We start class in aperture priority mode (the A or AV on your dial) and work our way to manual mode. Each class includes a composition method as well as technical shooting information.  You'll receive 6 pdf lessons and access to 6 videos in addition to two live online chats. See what Tracy MuilenbergDebbie West, and Amy LeJeune have to say about class.

Friday, October 22, 2010

9 Days 'til Halloween - On Location

The excitement is building in our house! With a weekend in the mix before the big event, it makes it perfect time for a location shoot!

Taking Ian out for a little fun somewhere that matches his costume makes him more cooperative and I'm always happiest with the background. So dress up the little one (or the dog or the big ones, whoever is cooperative), grab your camera, and head out!

Bats love hanging out at the cemetery.




A cemetery would be perfect for little ghosts, witches, vampires and other scary things. Find the oldest section of the cemetery for the best headstones. For our shoot we went to a historic cemetery from the Gold Rush Era about an hour before sunset. After a discussion about respecting the space, "mom what is respect," "why mom," "are they going to wake up," I let him explore. I tried to catch him at his natural moments with all of the costume on or just parts. Make it fun and you'll get the best photos.

Other fun spots might be:

Cleopatra  next to a river.

A little cheer leader or football player on the 50 yard line.

A little firefighter at the fire department.

Mario and Luigi in front of a pizza place.

Little bugs flying through a field of flowers or garden.

A little pumpkin at the pumpkin patch. I'd love to shoot a little pumpkin lined up with all of the pumpkins at the grocery store!

Harry Potter would be amazing atop a hill at dusk with just the blueish twilight glow behind him.

I can see Spider Man walking up the side of a wall. Position Spider Man below a window in your house, have him "cling" to the wall, shoot out the window as close as you can get to him at your widest angle. Oooh, this would be a fun shot!

Woody, Buzz or Jessie at the playground or near a train or stacked in a box with lots of other toys.

A little princess in front of a castle (I'm imagining our local Fairy Tale Town). 

I'm looking for a red velvet curtain and stage for  this year's photo of Ian!

What's your favorite Halloween location spot?



Thursday, October 21, 2010

Behind The Lens: Deirdre Harger

I love sending the emails out for Behind the Lens. The reactions and responses are so real and so fun. Deirdre's words were what every teacher wants to hear, "some of my best shots are a direct result of what I learned in your class." I'm so appreciative of her comment, but do believe she came with her own great talent too! I'd like to introduce you to Deirdre Harger.



What sparked your interest in photography?
Mostly children and family and the desire to document our lives’ progression.  We got an EOS film camera as a wedding gift, and I started photographing our dogs and family members (always on auto).   Later, we got our first digital camera (a 3 megapixel Olympus) as a gift from my mother-in-law.  I finally progressed to a digital EOS but still always on auto.  As I delved into digital scrapbooking, I discovered “Get Me Off Auto” and “Capturing a Photo a Day” and then “Your Life Through the Lens".  Once I started to learn about exposure, shutter speed, ISO, aperture and all that other fun stuff, I was hooked.  
What camera do you use?
I use a Canon 40D 
What is your favorite lens?
My favorite lens is my Canon 50mm f1.8, with my Canon 70-200 f4 a close second.


What makes you happiest about your photography?
My photography makes me happiest when it captures a mood and sparks a memory so that I can feel that mood and moment all over again every time I look at the photo.

What have you learned from Your Life: Captured Through The Lens that has helped your photography most?
I love the way “Your Life:  Captured Through the Lens” explained technical elements of photography while also delving into the emotional side of things.  It taught me to try to find the little things in my life that will remind me of what I was doing that day, not just the big moments, but the everyday little things, and to be able to capture them in a photograph that’s pleasing as well.


What are your current photography goals?
My current photography goals:  I want my focus to be sharper.  I really want to just keep building on what I’ve learned through tons of practice.  I want to be able to view my surroundings in a unique way and capture that with my camera.   I also love viewing others’ work and I draw a lot of inspiration from that.  I guess my main goal is to have a meaningful visual memoir of our lives for my current and future family members and friends  I am fortunate enough to be able to go on most of my children's field trips, so I take a lot of photos that other parents really appreciate.  I also need to try to get in front of the lens more too! 


Thanks Deirdre for sharing your images and words. I love your take on everyday life.


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You can be a part of Your Life: Captured Through The Lens. The six week class begins on November 2nd. We'll explore  "shutter speed, ISO, aperture and all that other fun stuff" in a user friendly, step by step way. You'll finish class shooting on Manual mode and understanding how aperture and shutter speed work as well! You can take part in 13 Days 'Til Halloween for a chance at a spot!

10 Days 'til Halloween - Cut Off Parts


Focus on the unexpected today to create a bit of visual interest in your subject. The viewer doesn't need to see the entire costume to know exactly what he is dressed as!

In addition, you can see a visual triangle in this photo - from tip of his cape to his eye to the tie below his chin. Whether you have a triangle or simply emphasize a part of your subject, try a Halloween twist by only capturing a portion of your subject!

Avoid chopping at joints, it just isn't as pretty!

Happy Haunting!

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

11 Days 'til Halloween

Lightroom can help you make any photo spooky in three easy steps!

Grab a well exposed photo.


So let's Halloween this up now!


  1. In the Develop Mode/Basics panel, slide Blacks to the right to make it slightly darker. It gives your photo that spooky edge.
  2. Now add Matt K's Nostalgic Preset. (what? You don't have that?! It is my go to spooky preset! A Halloween must)
  3. You can fiddle with your Blacks again to get it just right or go with what you've got!



It works with people as well!


Enjoy creating some frightening photos! I'd love to know if you have a favorite spooky preset too.

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

12 Days 'til Halloween

Today we are going to dig into our photos.

How many old Halloween photos do you have buried in boxes or  deep in the digital cobwebs of external hard drives? Once you find them, the challenge is to print them, scrap them, display them. Get them out of their purgatory for a few weeks to help add to your decor!

They might be four years old or so.


Or three years old

Or REALLY old. The choice is up to you! Yep, that's me with my little sister and brother. Seems we have a long line of pirate blood in our family!


Show us or tell us what you dig up and how you display it!

Monday, October 18, 2010

Picture Of The First Day Of School

Doesn't the first day of school need to be rewarded? It was huge and he ate almost the entire thing. School has given the boy an appetite!

13 Days 'til Halloween

'Tis the season to be scary!

Halloween is a big event in our house with a little boy who loves to dress up and partake of all things scary. Of course, the candy is a bonus too!

For the next 13 days I'm going to count down to the big event with a photo prompt. It might be a tip, maybe an idea, but each will prompt you to get out your camera and shoot! Then link me up to your take or leave a comment and you'll go in a drawing on November 1st for a spot in Your Life: Captured Through The Lens, my most popular photography class. That means you can get up to 13 chances to win!

Today's idea - Capture the Decor

ISO 400, f/2.5, ss 1/250

Decorations are such an important part of an occasion. We have ghosts, spiders, rats, and ravens around our house. Something new seems to appear every day. Go grab a shot of them, whether they are home made, purchased in the clearance bin,  or heirlooms passed down (do people have Halloween heirlooms...hmmm). We're keeping it simple too...just shoot. No worries. I shot fairly wide to leave the focus on just one frank, and leave you guessing what the rest of the stuff on my mantle is!

Ian and I made these fun Frankensteins, he likes to point out the bolts. The all important part of an Frankenstein!

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Your Life: Captured Through The Lens is a 6 week online, interactive photography course. We start class in aperture priority mode (the A or AV on your dial) and work our way to manual mode. Each class includes a composition method as well as technical shooting information.  You'll receive 6 pdf lessons and access to 6 videos in addition to two live online chats. See what Tracy Muilenberg, Debbie West, and Amy LeJeune have to say about class.

Sunday, October 17, 2010

And So It Begins

Dear Ian,
Tomorrow is a big day little man. After taking an unexpected path, tomorrow you begin school.

You have so much to learn ahead of you. You will have opportunities to see the world in new and different ways, to fill your mind with knowledge, insight and understanding. I know it will be an incredible journey. I know you will rise to the challenges ahead of you.

Yes, it's early kindergarten, but there you will learn some of your most important life lessons and make friends perhaps forever. You will learn the value of play and community. You will learn to share and to listen and to color. Know that outside of the lines is okay by me. Curiosity is a good thing, please keep yours.

I hope you look back on these years and remember nothing but goodness, happiness, and joy. I hope your pants stay up and your shoes stay on. I hope you can leave your weapons at home and keep your imagination alive.

Oh, and remember its okay to say "Momma, I love you" and to give give me a hug before you go. And it will be for a very very long time. I don't care what your friends think :).

Love you buddy,

Mom

Friday, October 15, 2010

Boys in Motion

He is a mover. Lately he seems to have the most energy right before bed. What is that about? We're home today enjoying his LAST day before he goes to his new school on Monday. He's excited. My emotions are very mixed!

He's watching his favorite movie and I'm wandering around the web. In my wandering I found a fun blog, Home With The Boys. I just love her challenge today, Boys In Motion. Yep, I have one of those. 

This is absolutely one of my favorite photos. I love the motion, the joy and the silliness. It is completely him!

What is that you love about your favorite photos? Just wondering.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Capturing Life One Photo At A Time!

We are on LOAD Day #14! I haven't missed a day of capturing our stories. I am loving digging through photos and finding those with moments and memories I need to write down. I'm keeping it simple because, well, I have a lot of moments! And wow, does this boy love to make faces!

 Credits at DesignerDigitals

Credits at DesignerDigitals

On another note, I'm offering Your Life: Captured Through The Lens again! This is MY MOST popular class. I love watching people's skills develop through class and love seeing the bits and pieces of everyone's life. Early bird registration ends on October 19th!

If you've taken the class, what did you enjoy most? What did you learn that most benefited you?

If you've not taken it, what questions do you have about it? What's holding you back? ;)

I'll have a little something for two of you just for leaving a comment. 

Have a great day!

Saturday, October 09, 2010

What Makes A Photograph Special?

What makes a photograph special? It might be the exposure and lighting. The angle you've captured. The  uncluttered background or the action you've stopped. It could be a small detail or the big picture.


Honestly though.

It's really about one thing.

A photograph is special when it means something to you. When it tells a story that connects the moment to your heart. When it stirs emotion. When it matters. To you.

So embrace the blurry, the compositionally challenged. The overexposed. The underexposed.

Embrace the connection to your heart.

That is what matters most.

Wednesday, October 06, 2010

We Have A Winner!

Thank you for all of the wonderful comments on My Three Lens Weekend Post! It makes me so happy that I can help so many of you capture the moments of your life. This will be a post I come back to every time I doubt why I blog!

Gloria from Bolivia, you are the winner of a pass to Your Life: Captured Through The Lens. Class starts on November 2nd!

Looking forward to seeing you in class.

For now, I'm back to LOAD. I'm having a load ;) of fun and truly can't remember the last time I felt this inspired to document our life! Here's a quick look at a few of my favorite pages so far.




Credits here and here

Tuesday, October 05, 2010

The Importance of Perspective

I've been loving creating this week for Layout A Day.  I finally did something with one of my favorite photos, but first, let me share the photo's evolution.

Ian and I have made a ritual of going to The Train Museum followed by a trip to "our" candy store. The nice one. The one that gives him two rolls of smarties at no charge or validates our parking for a small candy purchase. He loves to sit and eat his candies, one by one, saving the second roll for our trip home.

On this particular wet, February afternoon, he'd decided to carry his blanket in his backpack, you know, just in case he needed it. There is just something about a boy and his backpack. I snapped several photos as he intently ate each candy.

The first photo, just didn't capture what I wanted. He wasn't very pleased with it either, as his candy went rolling out of his hand.


The next photo, I changed my perspective, but faulted on the "from where I'm standing without moving my body" angle. It's rarely a compelling angle after the button has been pushed.


So I moved in closer, always a good rule of thumb. I wanted the candy sign, but really didn't want the Raiders jacket in the background.


I changed from portrait to landscape to create more space for the eye to travel, but still that silly jacket.


And then I found it. Moving in closer and to the side just a bit, I was able to block the view of the jacket. Cutting off a bit of the bottom of the photo, I could fit in the candy sign. Sometimes it pays to keep shooting until the perspective is right.



Credits at DesignerDigitals

Sunday, October 03, 2010

A Three Lens Weekend

What a weekend! I used three different lenses this weekend, so you know we were busy!

Shea's car was stolen. With a full tank of gas, so I'm guessing it went a long way before we discovered it missing and the police report was filed. We are both sad and a bit disappointed (thank you yoga for taking the anger away).

We spent a marvelous Saturday (before realizing the car was stolen) with great friends. One of those all day unexpected extravaganzas complete with great food, conversation, and entertained kids! So thankful for wonderful friends. I got to try my hand at soccer photos for the first time!

I had a bit of fun. This is probably a little different than most parents want of their kids! It made me think of Tara Whitney's In Betweens.


Today was our annual trip to Apple Hill which, of course, meant a little stop at Jack Russell Brewery for a pint. Now fall can begin!

If you are stopping by from LOAD, welcome! Say hello if you have a chance! Everyone who does is going into a little impromptu drawing for a pass class to Your Life: Captured Through The Lens! Class starts November 2nd. Leave a comment by Wednesday 10/6 at 10PM Pacific time telling me what you like most around here! Not doing LOAD? Well, I guess I'll let you enter too :).

Here are a few of my favorite photography posts you might enjoy!
How To Photograph Meeting The Mouse
5 Ways to Photograph Active Children
Capture Context In Your Photography
Photographing At The Speed of a 4 Year Old
What If Photographers Posted Their Bad Photos
Don't Be Fooled By Bad Light

Stop by the TheDailyDigi where I write The Photography Class. You'll find some step by step posts to help you out.

Thanks for stopping by!

Saturday, October 02, 2010

Friday, October 01, 2010

September Rejects

In an effort to keep it real, it's time again for my rejects! I had a few. 

You could call it arty, I call it underexposed.


This was a great idea in my head. Unfortunately bending over during yoga to take a picture doesn't quite allow for the best control over my settings.



And then, I went to the other extreme. Funny thing...it was the same day! Looks a bit like an alien abduction.


Again, with the underexposure. And for good measure, out of focus as well!



Perhaps the back of the lens cap? An important picture I'm certain. 



Can you see the bat? Yeah, I can't either.


Maybe, I should rethink the wide angle lens?!


So those are my best of my worst for September! I hope October is in focus and well exposed for you!

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