ESTABLISHED 2010 - Beyond The Campfire was created to encourage readers to explore the great outdoors and to observe it close up. Get out and take a hike, go fishing or canoeing, or simply stretch out on a blanket under a summer sky...and take your camera along. We'll talk about combining outdoor activities with photography. We'll look at everything from improving your understanding of the basics of photography to more advanced techniques including things like how to see photographically and capturing the light. We'll explore the night sky, location shoots, using off camera speedlights along with nature and landscape. Grab your camera...strap on your hiking boots...and join me. I think you will enjoy the adventure.

Wednesday, October 3, 2018

A Photographers World: Hidden In The Chaos

Not so long ago I wrote a post about the Neurotic Photographer and how being one often proves an advantage over not being one. As a result I have learned how to look at the world through neurotic eyes, but even more important is being able to see beyond the clutter of nature's chaos. Hidden in that chaos one will discover intricate details illuminated by the various moods of light.


The world is filled with all kinds of visual chaos most of which interferes with our ability to isolate what is truly important. Being able to visually focus on what is actually capturing our attention requires employing a practiced skill. Novice and sometimes even accomplished photographers often fail to look beyond the obvious and tend to see only the big picture. But over time they eventually begin to realize how the big picture consists of a series of smaller moments of light. It is often these smaller moments of light that becomes the true photograph. Being able to wade through the chaos of the big picture and find those hidden smaller moments can result in the capture of extraordinary images.

Although Macro or closeup photography is a fascinating form of photography and certainly could be considered a part of what I am writing about, I am not specifically referring to just those kinds of tightly focused photographs. Sometimes hidden inside the chaos of the big picture resides a slightly more refined composition. The idea is to see what is truly there...to resolve your vision where you recognize that sliver of light opportunity that not only reveals what is the most important element of what you are seeing, but tells the larger story from a smaller perspective.


The photo above is a good example of this concept. Taken inside a congested wooded area on a very bright and sunny morning, visually the area appeared rather chaotic and cluttered. To the eye it looked very woodsy, but our visual acuity is able to separate and blend a wide range of light and dark contrasts. Even the most advanced cameras cannot do that. You end up with hots spots or washed out areas that eliminate the dimensional depth of the scene. Isolated on a stump was a graceful clump of grass illuminated by a single beam of morning light. This one moment of light told the bigger story of that wooded area in a dramatic yet simple composition.


Within the same wooded area you can discover a magnificent canyon with a wonderfully lively waterfall dropping from the apex of a horseshoe escarpment. It is truly a magical place to photograph as it provides a myriad of different looks. Once again, you might find yourself concentrating on the most obvious part of the scene, the waterfall, but, trying to capture the entire scene from that canyon can be a daunting trial. One particular fall day I stood near the base of the escarpment trying to compose an image with the waterfall as the main ingredient. Nothing was working, until I focused in on where my eye kept going which was a small group of trees with red and yellow leaves boldly accented against the gray stone face of the escarpment. On this particular day, that was the photograph I was looking for, I just did not see it at first because I was so fixated on the obvious, and failed to look for what was truly capturing my eye.

The first photo at the top of this post is another example of seeing what is hidden in the chaos. Sometimes it is not always a smaller view, it can be a wide view. The trick then is to simplify the composition and visually eliminate what is not needed. What caught my eye first were the reflections. By moving my location and arriving late in the afternoon just before sundown, I was able to position the two barns and capture a wonderful example of Kentucky back roads. Converting it to black and white and applying some creative cropping created a strong dramatic look. Within this image are several smaller images, smaller pieces of the composition, yet when combined within a wide overall view, those isolated smaller portions served to create a nice composition.

Sometimes we try to complicate the process by capturing everything in one image, but trust your eyes, they will point you to what is important. If your vision keeps returning to a particular spot, then something is there capturing your attention. Allow your instincts work for you.


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