Saturday, April 14, 2007

Profound....

Lately, I've been spending much more time over at ILP. You know...... you think you know things, or you think you have a talent for something. And then you stumble across a forum of professionals and hobbyists... and you realize there is SO MUCH MORE to learn and grow. I am just in awe of some of the images created and posted over there. It makes me feel truly humbled as a photographer. It makes me ITCH to do more. Make my images come even more alive. I am thirsting for more, more, more.....

And then I found myself getting frustrated. By lack of equipment, lack of time, lack of... "whatever."

Until I read this. I am about to share something profound. You can read it as a photographer, as it is meant... or very easily apply it to digital scrapbooking, or whatever art form is in your life.

A very cool and very different photographer wrote it~ her name is Cheryl Jacobs... be sure to check out her site.



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What Every Aspiring Photog Should Know


- Style is a voice, not a prop or an action. If you can buy it, borrow it, download it, or steal it, it is not a style. Don't look outward for your style; look inward.

- Know your stuff. Luck is a nice thing, but a terrifying thing to rely on. It's like money; you only have it when you don't need it.

- Never apologize for your own sense of beauty. Nobody can tell you what you should love. Do what you do brazenly and unapologetically. You cannot build your sense of aesthetics on a concensus.

- Say no. Say it often. It may be difficult, but you owe it to yourself and your clients. Turn down jobs that don't fit you, say no to overbooking yourself. You are no good to anyone when you're stressed and anxious.

- Learn to say "I'm a photographer" out loud with a straight face. If you can't say it and believe it, you can't expect anyone else to, either.

- You cannot specialize in everything.

- You don't have to go into business just because people tell you you should! And you don't have to be full time and making an executive income to be successful. If you decide you want to be in business, set your limits before you begin.

- Know your style before you hang out your shingle. If you don't, your clients will dictate your style to you. That makes you nothing more than a picture taker. Changing your style later will force you to start all over again, and that's tough.

- Accept critique, but don't apply it blindly. Just because someone said it does not make it so. Critiques are opinions, nothing more. Consider the advice, consider the perspective of the advice giver, consider your style and what you want to convey in your work. Implement only what makes sense to implement. That doesn't not make you ungrateful, it makes you independent.

- Leave room for yourself to grow and evolve. It may seem like a good idea to call your business "Precious Chubby Tootsies"....but what happens when you decide you love to photograph seniors? Or boudoir?

- Remember that if your work looks like everyone else's, there's no reason for a client to book you instead of someone else. Unless you're cheaper. And nobody wants to be known as "the cheaper photographer".

- Gimmicks and merchandise will come and go, but honest photography is never outdated.

- It's easier to focus on buying that next piece of equipment than it is to accept that you should be able to create great work with what you've got. Buying stuff is a convenient and expensive distraction. You need a decent camera, a decent lens, and a light meter. Until you can use those tools consistently and masterfully, don't spend another dime. Spend money on equipment ONLY when you've outgrown your current equipment and you're being limited by it. There are no magic bullets.

- Learn that people photography is about people, not about photography. Great portraits are a side effect of a strong human connection.

- Never forget why you started taking pictures in the first place. Excellent technique is a great tool, but a terrible end product. The best thing your technique can do is not call attention to itself. Never let your technique upstage your subject.

- Never compare your journey with someone else's. It's a marathon with no finish line. Someone else may start out faster than you, may seem to progress more quickly than you, but every runner has his own pace. Your journey is your journey, not a competition. You will never "arrive". No one ever does.

- Embrace frustration. It pushes you to learn and grow, broadens your horizons, and lights a fire under you when your work has gone cold. Nothing is more dangerous to an artist than complacence.



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wow.

8 comments:

MissHuniBuni said...

I totally agree photographers just leave me in awe and I just want to be like them..and have their cameras lol

Rona said...

What great and PROFOUND thoughts! Thanks for the link to Cheryl's site. I will check that out. I have no desire to be a professional fotog.....just good enough to take good pics of my kids so I can scrap them LOL!

Anonymous said...

Those are some awesome words to live by thank you for sharing!! From a wannabe photog hehe ;)

xoxo

Anonymous said...

those are some great thoughts. I saved that site and will have to go and take a peek later on. I just got a new cannon.. and let me tell you .. im clueless.. alot of times i wonder.. why did i bother.. but im learning..

Theresa said...

Wow...I love that!! It really makes you look at things differently, if for just the first few moments after reading it, but I hope to remember it every time I get discouraged.

Also? Her photos are amazing. Wow!

Michelle said...

Thank you, Andrea, for sharing this! :) ALOT of it resonates with me right now...

:)

Emilie said...

Thanks for sharing this Andrea! It's very profound indeed!

ArtcTrish said...

I professional photography until I had to chose between work and pregnancy. I love everything you said there!
*** side note...I saw where you went to Toccoa College? Cool! I was lay campus m inster and we used to take our Auburn University students up there in the fall for retreat. GORGEOUS!!!!