Paring it down

Our new gear recently is aiming at a couple of different issues that, in my opinion hinder more than help. For one, in the past I had a nasty lens habit. I thought I needed all focal lengths. I have since learned that we don’t need them all, that really only complicates things and it adds significant weight to my kit. I actually carried lenses with me that I almost never used!

Of the photographers I’ve met who were particularly creative in their work, I have noticed that not many of them seem to concern themselves much with gear. They can’t often tell you much about the specs of a body they are using, they just don’t care. They are busy immersed in what they like to do, create beautiful art. Once you learn the basics with any camera they’re mostly the same. The brand or model of a camera body doesn’t matter, they’re mostly the same anyway, just a tool after all.

I’ve limited myself with three lenses and I think I can hold myself to that. I have one lens that does 90% of my shooting, then a wide one and a long one for those other 10%. That’s as technical as I wish to be at this point, I’m trying to push my creativity to new places now. The “perfect” technical image is just too rare so express yourself with imperfect but beautiful. :)

Time For A Facelift

As time goes by, I often lose track of it. It’s been a long time since any significant changes in my website. The name came and the site about when I started working as a concert photographer, I needed a name to put on the site so I could upload photographs, it was that simple. I still wish to maintain a web presence so it needs to be polished further than it is. I have been busy working “under the hood” a bit recently as well as planning the future of the website. There are a couple of changes that you will see right now. I’ve done away with the “Home” page and you now land into a photo gallery right away, it’s about the photos, right? Keep an eye on the site as it evolves.

Guillemot Pair

While in Shetland in the summer you must go to the Isle of Noss where Thousands of pairs of seabirds nest. They have Guillemots, Shags, Gannets and likely lots that I’m not remembering too. You can get into the island via a boat between Noss and Bressay if you want to walk the island but we took a boat tour that takes you directly to the nesting site. It’s hard in a situation like that yo isolate birds in a frame but I manages this shot of a pair of Guillemots. Amazing how much they resemble small penguins. I like the environmental composition in this. Who says we have to fill the frame?