Archives for posts with tag: Vision

The Question of Why

Why you picked up a camera and Why you can't put it down


So what was it about a camera that even made you/me/us pick it up in the first place?

Seriously.  Think about it.

That simple question has been running through my head all day.  It made me think about this old Canon body that my dad used to have in our closet.  I couldn’t tell you how old this thing was, or the last time it had been used before I found it.  It was old enough that the smell of the leather case it had been kept in for all those years had permeated the entire camera.  When I was probably 9 years old I would go around the house winding that thing up and taking shots without any film in it just because I knew  it had to be the coolest thing in our house – it really was a cool camera and I really loved the noise of the mirror flapping up and down.  I liked the sheer look of the thing – It was rugged as all get out but I knew it was for making something beautiful.  At that time I’m not sure it had much to do with creating beautiful images – though I do wish I had the shots from when my father would sneak film into it to surprise me.

As a kid I’m sure my love for the camera mostly came from my perception of it as being a high-tech toy that made one of the most beautiful noises I’d ever heard.  As an adult, through a long process, it obviously came much more than that.  The backstory is for another day.

So here’s the question again.

Why photography?  What made us pick up a camera for the first time and then keep picking it up time and time again?

I know for me its a combination of art and science.  I’ve always been “artsy” and if I think about it, the camera was really never far away my whole life.   I was always drawn to creating beauty but at the same time this scientific, numbers-driven, concrete stuff.  I’ll always remember creating those first intentional images and feeling the rush when you saw them – wanting to know what would happen if you tried this or that – what numbers needed to be changed to make this more beautiful.  The shape, the feel, and the technology of the whole thing obviously attracted me and I bet if many of us were honest, we picked up a camera for the first time because the technology is just plain cool.  It’s a sexy machine.

The sticking power of photography came from the experiences I had behind it – freezing emotions, events, and people.  I keep picking up the camera because I know that each and every time I do, it teaches me something new about it, humbles me, amazes me, and all the while encourages me to keep going.  I absolutly love the images – the moments – a picture allows me to create.  There is no doubt that we all could fill an entire blogs with the question “Why.”

So with that I open this question up to you.  Let us know why you started and what makes it more than just pointing a lens and pushing a button for you?  Why not something else?  We have a million things that we could occupy ourselves with, but why do we keep coming back to this?  Every story is different and I’m sure we all have our reasons – so lets here them!

And just fyi, as an adult, I still think the mirror flap and shutter are among the most beautiful noises I’ve ever heard.

 

Blogging 101: For Photographers

Why most blogs suck and why we don't read them


Right out of the gate, let me say this – in the 7+ years I’ve been blogging – this is one of the hardest posts I’ve ever written.  When you intitionally sit down to write a blog post who’s subtitle is “Why most blogs suck and why we don’t read them.” – a few things happen.  First, you risk coming across as an arrogant a-hole who runs a blog hosted on servers made out of gold.  Second, you all the sudden look around at your own blog and find yourself saying “Uhhhh…” and wondering who left the door open on the ‘healthy’ criticism refrigerator.  Third, you risk offending people.  I’m not here to offend people by any means.  If you are offending by this, feel free to go back to your blog with the #9eff00 background, the dancing banana, and the size 18 Comic Sans –  assume the everything is right with the world and don’t let us scare you.

I, undoubtedly, am an offender on some level of each one of these points I’m about to list.  I don’t pretend to not be with every single post.  It’s a blog – it’s organic – some days you just forget, you rant, you write like a 12 year old, or load 18 megabytes worth of photos into one post.

That being said, some might ask why write an article like this.  Good question.

Over the last 3 years I’ve had opportunities to teach on the subject of communication from a tech-centric point of view to a few nation-wide organizations.  Tech-centric meaning, we use technology to our advantage to communicate a specific message.  Every time I finish teaching, I walk away more and more convinced that simple things, especially when pertaining to a blog, can have huge advantages as far as effective communication is concerned.  On the same side of that coin, I can speak with some authority on the subject because, I, much like you, have been abused by blogs, bloggers, design, eye-ball melting backgrounds, marquees, pop-ups, adverts, and middle-aged house moms yelling at the internet for the better part of a decade.

So here we go:

Why most blogs suck and why we don’t read them
(in absolutely no order)

continue reading…

 

What you want w/ what you have

And how to avoid The Whiny Photographer...


This is a topic that has been on my mind almost daily for the last three months in one form or another.  What’s the question exactly?  If I had to sum it up, it would be this:

How do you shoot what you love and actualize your vision in an environment that encourages something else?

Some necessary back story. I live in far Western China as a photographer, photo business owner, and teacher.  A travel photographers dream, right?  Travel photography I like, but I don’t absolutely love it.  I don’t hate it by any means and in fact I really enjoy it.  See the difference there?  I walk down the street every day and pass highly interesting subjects from 6 different minority and ethnic groups.  Monks, Muslims, Chinese, Mongolians, and a few that 99.9% of the world wouldn’t recognize.  It’s a truly awesome place to live and run a business.  Photographically I’ve had to dig to find my gold.

continue reading…

 
Brian Hirschy Photography