For Beginners – Learning to See
A granite shoreline on a local lake
offers endless opportunities for images.
Photography is about vision – real
or perceived.
Before we take the camera out of the
bag we must first learn to look at what we are seeing, and to see at which we
are looking.
Often times beginning photographers
will stop dead in their tracks and in haste put the camera to their eye. Then
the search begins, the human form will go through contortions resembling those
of Gumby and Pokey while the lens is zoomed in and out, raised up and down, and
enough gadgets are incorporated to leave any mechanical engineer in awe.
The fact of the matter is that once
we have recognized a scene worthy of photographing, the one element that often
fails in the process is the inability to see, to really see, what it was that
stopped us in the first place. Once the camera is raised to the eye you
should be looking at what it was that you had earlier seen, thus, the camera
simply becomes a mechanical device to record the image that the grey matter
located four-inches behind the viewfinder has already registered.
So, “how do we learn to see,” you
might ask?
This is a million dollar question,
and hopefully, the answer is one that you will chase for as long as you are
physically able to hold a camera. As we learn to see we incorporate a vision or
style, and as you journey along this wonderful path you will find that you will
revisit that same subject in a different light as your vision and style
evolves. This is healthy and shows a maturity and progression.
But first we must give our eyes
exercises so the act of seeing becomes an intuitive process.
As we learn to read, we read slowly
by studying each syllable of each word, and annunciating those syllables aloud.
As our reading skill improves we learn to read silently, and eventually will
often be speed-reading by skipping or scanning words in our left-to-right habit
instilled form. We don’t see every word, we just intuitively know what noun,
verb or adjective is next simply by scanning that line.
This is a problem for the new
photographer. For years we have trained ourselves to not only read, but also to
look from left-to-right, and as such we often skip over pertinent details.
A backyard garden is a prefect
training ground for the nature photographer. Get down low and study those
flowers to see what surprises may be waiting.
One of the first tricks I learned
many years ago had nothing to do with photography, but was drilled into me by
an army sergeant. It only took a few smacks up the back of my head to learn how
to look from right-to-left when scanning a landscape in an effort to see the
hidden “enemy” in our mock battles. This process of reverse reading forced me
to slow down and read each tree as if it were a syllable I was seeing for the
first time. Even today, about thirty years after I called that sergeant every
adjective not found in a descent dictionary, I still find myself scanning a
landscape from right-to-left.
If you don’t believe this will help
in your visual acuity, just read the first line of any paragraph in this
column. Notice how your eyes skip and jump ahead of what your mind is
absorbing? Now read that same line from right-to-left, I’ll bet you are even
turning your head with your eyes as you slowly study each word.
Now put this skill to practise. When
you are out at your backyard bird feeder, or at the neighbourhood park, start
scanning those trees looking for birds from right-to-left. Soon this will
become an intuitive process, and you will see more birds in the forest or
spiders on flowers than you ever imagined. Only by seeing that bird or spider
can you then make a picture of it.
As the great purveyor of quotes,
professional baseball player Yogi Berra, once said: “You can observe a lot by
just looking around.”
by Dale Wilson
Read more: http://digital-photography-school.com/for-beginners-learning-to-see#ixzz2HCEZr8Qm
Read more: http://digital-photography-school.com/for-beginners-learning-to-see#ixzz2HCEZr8Qm
No comments:
Post a Comment