Let’s Get Started

by David W. Powell

Bring it on home

We all enjoy photographic expeditions… field trips, foreign and exotic places, bird and butterfly sanctuaries, industrial decay, etc.  I do as well. However, many of my most popular shots were taken in my neighborhood and surroundings.  As you encounter what is around you on a daily basis, you can react to the changing light and weather, trying this and that. I speak often about using your camera regularly so that the buttons and settings are under your fingertips and you don’t have to think about them when a shot presents itself to you… like a musician practicing scales. Shooting what’s around you allows you to practice framing, composition, lens selection, and point of view on a regular basis. Again, practicing scales. We begin to push boundaries and try new things so that when we are on a trek or trip, we will be better equipped with expanded vision. 

Remember, as David Thoreau said, “It’s not what you look at that matters, it’s what you see.” And I would add… how you see it camera in hand.

From my neighborhood and surroundings:

Front yard at sunrise
A walk to the park in Hampden
Through the kitchen window
At Scott’s Cove. North of Burtonsville off of Rt. 29
Paint Branch walking path between Fairland and Randolph Roads
Along Old Columbia Pike on my walk to the Praisner Library
Paint Branch rock beach near the picnic pavilion off of Randolph Rd.
The fence along our driveway
Kinetic sculpture next to the Fenton St. parking garage. I photographed it once a month for a year as I went to my eye doc., early, late, rain or shine.
On the coffee table in our living room

So… where does that leave us? Look at what you see around you regularly and become part of it. You don’t need a field trip, vacation, or cruise to have fun taking pictures, honing your skills, and expanding your vision.

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