Old dog, new tricks: My photographic evolution.

I have always preferred photographing landscapes. There are several reasons why, the most prominent being I’m good at it. In the same way that reading and writing came naturally to me, taking picture postcard style photos has been easy. Give me almost any kind of natural environment and someplace to stand, I’ll find pictures and take some good ones. As soon as I developed my first roll of film taken on a real SLR, I knew this was something for which I had natural aptitude.

Dry weeds by the river

But there are other, less obvious reasons:

  1. Everyone loves pretty pictures. Animals, waterfalls, seascapes, sunrise and sunset, trees and leaves … purple mountain’s majesty and fruited plains. There’s nothing controversial about landscapes.
  2. Landscapes (excluding wild animals, a whole different category) have the decency to stay put. They don’t wriggle, make weird faces, or try to stick their noses into the lens.
  3. Shots of nature are usually done in day time or at worst, dawn or dusk, which means no complicated lighting issues. Sunlight,shade, or overcast — daylight is easy. Nobody does lighting like God.

After more than 40 years of taking pictures of nature, I realized I wasn’t getting the same satisfaction from my photos as I had in the past.

Riverside

Part of the problem is that we live in a valley of rare natural beauty. That may not sound like a problem and it isn’t a complaint, but it’s a big change from how I’ve always lived. I was born and raised in New York, moved out to Long Island, then over to Jerusalem. When I came back, I bounced from New York to Boston.

The countryside  was where I went to find pictures to take. Now everything is upside down. It’s the city that’s far away; nature is all around me.

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It’s no challenge to find lovely scenery. I can stand on my back deck to catch a sunrise. It’s less than a mile to my choice of rivers, marshland, half a dozen waterfalls, the big pond where swans live and herons wade by the shore.

If I walk a few hundred yards up my street, Percherons are grazing in the pasture. Down the other way are the old barns and restored Victorian mansions. Anything I might want that’s pretty or illustrative of country life — other than the ocean (that’s a bit of a haul) — is easy, convenient and accessible. No parking problems, no crowds.

Swans

In the autumn, every tree looks as if it’s lit from within. When the snow falls, the world turns into a Currier and Ives drawing. The valley is beautiful in all seasons, stunning in several. Spring is glorious when we get one. Some years we have spring. Other years, we go from winter to summer with a barely enough time between them to buy a bathing suit.

Painted Lady - 2 Marilyn Armstrong

One day, while my granddaughter and I were out shooting, she commented that everything looks the same. I understood what she meant. Not that it isn’t beautiful. I had also begun to notice the same thing. There was nothing to challenge us.

Beautiful, but predictable. Woods are woods and we have plenty of that. We have lots of waterfalls, rivers, ponds and streams but they all look very similar to each other. Assuming normal lighting conditions, you don’t have to take your camera off automatic unless you’re looking for a special effect. We revisit places often enough so that even using all the creativity we can collectively find, we’ve much made our statements and have no more to say.

An office.

A few months ago, my back was bothering me more than usual, but I was in the mood to shoot. I started looking around to see if there was something worth shooting in my house. It turns out you can do a lot with light coming through windows. I became enamored of shadowy scenes of my house transformed by various angles of light. Eventually I ran out of windows.

Morning light in my kitchen as coffee brews ...

I yearned for urban architecture, abstract shapes and forms. I got a bit of a fix from some of the mills, but most of the mills are not architecturally particularly interesting. The very old ones can be, but the newer ones are just big square brick factories and often hard to get close enough — or far enough — to make a picture. I’ve never been good at that kind of photography but I wanted to try. Lacking a city, I began carrying a camera everywhere, even to the grocery store, the mall, the doctor’s office. I have been pleasantly surprised at how much I’ve found.

Symphony Hall Pillar

I’ve shot vegetables and farm stands, parking lots and street scenes and on our annual Christmas excursion into Boston, a fair number of night pictures in and around Boston Common and the Statehouse. I didn’t even have “the good cameras” with me. I shot all of it with the little Canon point and shoot I bought so that I’d have one very compact camera with a super-zoom that I could toss in my bag. The result has been better than I imagined possible. I’ve also gained even more respect for the capabilities of these Canon Powershot cameras.

KK

This is the fourth one I’ve owned. The first got passed to my son when I replaced it with a newer one and it is still working fine. It’s replacement was an amazingly good camera, but somewhere along the line, it was dropped. The culprit has never confessed, but the camera was dead.

Statehouse - Dec Night

In between, I got a relatively inexpensive Canon Powershot 130. I knew I would soon replace it, but I needed a camera in a hurry. It did the job, then moved on to my daughter-in-law.

That was when I got bought the big Canon that now belongs to my granddaughter, discovered the big camera was much too heavy for my aging wrists … and got the Olympus PEN E-PL1, then the Olympus PEN E-P3. Then a long zoom. There’s nothing wrong with that lens. It’s fine. I just never use it. It turns out that I rarely shoot long, but I frequently shoot close. I want — but am not likely to get — a good wide-angle lens.

The ones that are wide enough are slow and those that are fast enough are not wide enough or so expensive it makes my heart stop. So I treated myself to a 45mm 1.8 portrait lens which is delicious and since, next to landscapes, my strong suit is casual portraits, it fits nicely into my lens set.

City Life

Somewhere along the line, I bought the Canon Powershot SX 260 which has a good superzoom. It isn’t fast enough for most night shooting, although if I would actually use my tripod, I could overcome that problem. But if I’m going to haul the tripod, then I’m going to bring the Olympus cameras and lenses, not the point and shoot.

It is ironic that I take more pictures with the  little Canon than the much more expensive and higher quality Olympus cameras because I won’t just toss them into my bag. Compact superzoom is currently trumping higher quality. I’m beginning to think what I really need is one of the new generation of incredibly expensive but really high quality all-in-one cameras … but they are out of my price range. Still, there are a couple of good ones out there that make my heart go pit-a-pat.

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There’s no moral to this story unless it is that photography has been my hobby since I got my first real SLR in 1970. It’s the world’s best hobby. You never outgrow it. You never are too old to take pictures. It’s fun, very occasionally profitable (but not profitable enough to cover the cost of the equipment!), and there’s always something new to try.

If you have money to spend, there’s always a new generation of cameras and lenses. Giving my granddaughter a camera was the best gift I ever gave her. She has an entire lifetime of discovering the world through a lens ahead of her. No matter what else happens, it will still go with her.



Categories: #animals, #Photography, Architecture, Arts, Cameras, Nature, Seasons

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6 replies

  1. Interesting that you are moving towards urban landscapes. Something, that of course, I do a lot of. I think a lot of what we shoot tends to be based on accessibility and of course interest. I definitely would shoot landscapes if I lived where you do.

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    • If you lived around here, you would definitely shoot landscapes. The pictures jump out and bite your ankles. But even when I lived in the city, which I did most of my life … New York, Jerusalem, Hempstead, and Boston … I never really looked at cities as photogenic. Maybe because nature and portraits were very easy, but urban scenes were not. I couldn’t see those pictures in my head. Now, I do. There is very little that could be regarded as urban around here… so I have to save myself for our occasional excursions into Boston or visits to New York. I think being exposed to so much different photography on the web has changed my perspective a lot.

      On Tue, Dec 18, 2012 at 12:50 PM, Serendipity

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  2. Terrific pictures!! Of course, I am partial to the one with our lovely Granddaughter, aka “The Overlord”.

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    • The camera loves her.

      On Tue, Dec 18, 2012 at 11:19 AM, Serendipity

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      • Nice photos Marilyn…, when I’m shooting I tend to see things few of my friends do as you’ve done here. Most folks are surprised at what exists around them right in front of their noses. While I agree that the camera seldom if ever captures the magnificence of a scene in all of its panoramic glory, it can focus in on a portion of this and actually create a different and equaly involving perpective. You’ve done this very well in a bunch of those I’ve been privilaged to see. Hving known you for more yeras than either of us care to mention…, I’m actually proud of you and love your work. So folks can really do something with their lives after retirement eh? You go Girl!

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        • I wonder how I found the time to go to work! I’ve been taking pictures since just after Owen was born … 42 years. Mitch gave me my first camera. What’s changed is that I have more time to work at it … Digital photography is also less expensive. All the film, developing … even if you did it yourself there was still paper, equipment, chemicals and they weren’t cheap … really added up. And finding someplace dry and cool to store proofs and prints, trying to figure out how to keep negatives from being damaged or lost. Now I have Photoshop. I’m not an expert user, but I can do so much and so easily. I haven’t even learned half of what I could do … but even the little I’ve learned is great. I think my overall eye is better than I was (aside from not seeing as well, that is), but mostly, I have more time and energy to devote to it … and some place to show them off!!

          Nothing can entirely capture a large scene, or at least most still photography can’t. Film sometimes can. Just go to any Imax theater or any virtual ride at a theme park. It’s amazing what they do nowadays. You have to know what you can and can’t do, be able to see when there’s a shot and when something is pretty but doesn’t have the components to make a composition. I used to do a lot of crawling around between clumps of grass, rocks and stuff to create a foreground and give photos perspective. I can’t do that anymore, but I’ve found ways of using light the way I used to use objects. I’ve learned a few things, I guess. It doesn’t hurt that modern cameras are so easy to use. Autofocus is not a luxury anymore. My eyes are just not good enough for me to know if I’m really in focus, especially in low light so good autofocus is the difference between a good picture and not.

          And I LOVE my little cameras!

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