doidinho wrote in post #5676285
I'm heading the the University of Washington Arboretum tomorrow morning with the sole intention of trying to visualize my photos before I capture them.
I have previously been to the arboretum three times to photograph it and have come back with only a few halfway decent images. I can feel that there is some real potential there even though I have not yet been able to capture it.
Two questions:
Do you do excersices like this and do you find yourself retuning to places that you have previously photographed numerous times without success because you feel there is something there worth capturing even though you have been unable to see it previously.
Hey, Robert!
I lived in Seattle for nine years and visited the Arboretum a few times, but not as a photographer. I don't remember it as visually "photogenic", so I can understand your question!
I go back to places a lot, sometimes to look for the potential that I may have missed, and sometimes to experiment with different approaches to my photography. I may go one time with one camera and one lens, another time deliberately another lens for a different approach.
For example, you could go for one visit and concentrate on doing only macros (plenty of opportunities there
) and then on another occasion take your widest aperture lens and experiment with the shallowest depth of field shots with different objects. Try sitting/laying on the ground and getting isolated subjects from low perspectives. Try finding things and positions where the lake is the background and working with larger apertures to see what kind of bokeh you can get with the lake, especially if it's a sunny afternoon with light reflecting from the water.
I guess that what I'm suggesting is that instead of taking pictures of the Arboretum, focus on things you can isolate and create your own environment for them!