manningtree

aiddy's not thought through thoughts, thoughts usually only intended for me

February 6, 2010

Practice with the Daily Shoot

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , — aiddy @ 3:06 am

Practice makes perfect someone once said.

One of the tricks to improving at photography is to practice capturing images that convey something that someone else set the brief for.

The edge of the great bear

The daily shoot does just that. Follow @dailyshoot on twitter; you’ll get a new brief | assignment | challenge each day, take a picture and then post a link.

The humble effort above is for assignment 77, wherever there’s an edge, and is a partial reflection of Simon Patterson’s The Great Bear.

Thank you James and Mike for executing on such a great idea.

February 5, 2010

Sure, of course I can do an album cover

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , — aiddy @ 3:20 pm

I’m glad it was chucking it down with rain this morning. Instead of the bike or bus I drove and had NPR/KUOW for company. Marcie Sillman interviewed Jini Dellaccio: musician, graphic designer and photographer.

Proof that news doesn’t, nor shouldn’t, be angst-inducing or depressing. Feeling good & inspired and it’s only just gone 7…

January 7, 2010

Inspiration: Trains of Japan

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , — aiddy @ 1:11 am

Faisal Sultan has some great pictures of the trains of Japan.

The colours are great; but I prefer them in monochrome.

January 5, 2010

Inspiration: Monochrome Wildlife

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , — aiddy @ 9:58 pm

Kalyan Varma shoots the wildlife and landscape of the Masai Mara in monochrome (with a Nikon D700):

“when I landed in Africa and saw the grasslands stretching as far as the eyes could see up to the horizon, it totally changed my perspective. For a change, one could think about the light, the composition, the perspective, the sky, the background, the position to shoot wildlife […] I realised the only way to do that was in Black and Whites. The monotones let me focus purely on the aesthetics in their simplest form”

http://kalyanvarma.net/essays/mara/

Thanks Ram for the tip.

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