Advice

Patience - The Key to Photography

When taking photos many skills come into play, but arguable the most important skill of all is patience. Photography is the art of catching the right image at the right moment in the right light. The best composition and the lighting won’t make up for bad timing in most situations. While great timing can offset composition or lighting that isn’t perfect. Basically, if you miss the moment there is no photograph.

Catching that moment is a mixture of patience and speed. All of the other skills become important at that very moment. If you aren’t proficient in the use of your camera, or doesn’t understand how light works or get lost in the composition then you’ll still miss that moment; but without patience you’ll miss the opportunity to miss the shot.

The photo I’m using as an example, is one of my favorite photos. It’s a shot I just can’t get where I live by virtue of being landlocked. It’s one of those, once in a lifetime photos. Might the chance present itself again; maybe but I would have to implement even greater patience measured in days or weeks not minutes and seconds.

I was visiting my brother in Los Angeles and we went to Manhattan Beach. While we walked around we checked out the pier and all the people enjoying a California fall. As we walked down the beach path i saw the sun was was about to set and do so with the pier in the foreground. Then I noticed a sail boat meandering on a path to cross the setting sun on the horizon. I began taking some photos to help figure out the lighting and the composition I wanted. From 6:04 to 6:05 I took about 8 photos. I was using a pocket camera so I didn’t have a burst mode, it’s as shoot and recompose. The 7th image ended up being “the one.” The sail boat was exactly where I wanted it. I had the image already in my head before it happened, but I had to be patient and wait for that moment to arrive. When it did I got the shot I wanted. The shot I imagined.

It’s not an amazing photo, but it’s a good photo and quite simply one of my favorite photos and I’ve taken many, many thousands of images. To me it’s the kind of photo you see on posters or books showing what many imagine when they dream of life on the west coast. Had I not combined my skills of composition with patience, the image would have passed me by like a ship on the horizon.

Sony DSC-HX5V, f/5.5, 1/320s, ISO 125 - Edited in SnapSeed on iPhone (Taken October 26, 2014 - Manhattan Beach, California)

Multiple photos taken to get “The One”

Wedding Shoot On An iPhone

The Happy Bride & Groom

Wedding Shoot On An iPhone
Several years ago I traveled up to Kansas to see my oldest daughter marry the man of her dreams. I was there to witness the moment with her mom, her bio-dad and a host of family and friends. I didn’t go as the family photographer, but me being me I couldn’t help but take photos. I didn’t bring my compact camera of the time but I did bring my iPhone. At the time I owned the iPhone 5s. The camera on it was the best on any smartphone of the day but it wasn't anywhere near as good as current top of the line smartphones and would be  eclipsed just three generations later with the iPhone 7. It was though the camera on had on me. I took many photos that day, along side the wedding photographer. 

Three Generations

While my photos weren’t taken on a top of the line camera, or even a very good camera, they were captured. The moments, the memories the event forever saved to be viewed and shared for years to come.

So the next time you feel like you just don’t have the camera or your “better” camera isn’t with you, remember - the best camera you have is the one you have on you.

I often hear how someone doesn’t take photos because they just don’t have a good enough camera. While I totally understand the sentiment, I've felt that way myself more than a few times; it’s just not true. If you have a camera you can capture the moment. Photography is, at it’s hart is more than just capturing a moment but capturing a feeling. While some cameras capture more detail or more dynamic range than others, all captures can capture the moment and therefore a feeling.

The Bridge & Her Mom

When the day was done, my daughter was now a wife and I had over 1,200 photos of the event all taken on my iPhone 5s. In the days that followed I sorted through the images, edited some and sent them on to my daughter. As you look at the gallery below you may notice that in many of these images not everyone is looking at the camera. That’s because they were looking at the actual wedding photographer. I was just trying to get “the shot” anyway I could.

My daughter of course new I was taking photos. I was always the one taking photos. However, I don’t think she knew how many I had taken or how complete the collection turned out to be. It was a good thing too.

The wedding photographer she had hired had some kind of critical error and every photo taken was lost. Had I not taking the photos I did, my daughter would have had only a hand full of images to remember one of the most important days of her life. Nor would anyone else. Not uncommon at weddings is the only one taking more than a handful of photos is the wedding photographer.

The Sisters - Personalities On Display