Saturday, January 22, 2011

Photography Portfolio

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Photographers are known through their profiles

A photography portfolio is like a resume or a portfolio that a super model creates to promote to the public. A well written profile can do wonders for the photographer since the first contact with the art critics and public is through this medium. As in any profession it is important to sell oneself and the promotional technique used will determine how successful or otherwise an artist would become. One must learn this art of seductive persuasion for attracting the public to make a beeline for one's Galleries.

What are the steps of preparing a Photography Portfolio?

All good things happen in threefold! Let us consider the 3 most important steps to achieving a write-up that everyone will think is written by a professional copy writer!

The first step one should take is conceptualizing the USP of your art. By USP we normally mean the Unique Selling Proposition but in our particular case let's rename this acronym as Unrivalled Self Portrait! What needs to be written or included in good and effective personal achievements in the artistic world? What ever you have so far completed in terms of picture composing should be placed as a theme in your Photography Portfolio. The theme is what you do best in photography and must be illustrated with an aesthetic design of your theme work. Maybe you are a black and white photographer of the abstract kind, or a realistic current affairs political events reviewer in pictures, or dedicated to the artistic bent of mind that young children depict and need to be encouraged etc. Always plan your theme presentation before choosing or taking appropriate photographs.

Secondly, be very careful and judicious in picking your best photographs and in case you require a new set for the chosen theme, take pains in creating new photos. A photography profile cannot be just a collage of photographs. They must be systematically placed in the profile document to tell a specific story to the reader. Out of a multitude of pictures to your credit you must only choose the very best that exhibit your artistic talent and place them interspersed between short text that enhances the art form. It is not that length of your resume matters so much as the relevance of how you promote your acumen towards the theme art being depicted. This makes up the gist of a professional photography profile.

Thirdly and finally you are ready to exhibit your work in the form of a portfolio. This is just what a super model or budding fashion model also does! Become a true salesperson and visit local art collectors and critics who matter. Learn the art of online and offline marketing to approach your family, friends, acquaintances and show them your aptitude in a subtle manner. Remember, you cannot really promote yourself by giving lectures and talks at seminars etc, but you can surely sell your artistic bent of mind or "camera fingers" by creating an extraordinary photography portfolio.

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Black and white photography: Taking great black and white photographs

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Black and white photography: Taking great black and white photographs

Photography in its simplest definition is the recording of light. When taking photographs in black and white, light and its interplay with the subject of your photo must be uppermost in your mind. With practice, you will develop the most essential skill necessary for good black and white photography -- being able to imagine your subject in black and white.

Seeing in black and white can be learned through paying close attention to the quality and direction of light. Examine the paintings of the Impressionists. These works are as much about the quality of light as they are about their subjects. One of the clearest examples is the haystack series by Claude Monet. Even though Monet’s subject and viewpoint are exactly the same in every painting, each of these paintings differs greatly because of the quality of light. It is this same consideration of light that the black and white photographer must keep in mind.

Considerations for black and white photography:

Viewpoint. The first and most important consideration of any photograph is viewpoint. What is your subject? What is it that you want to the photograph say or show.

Amount of light. Is there enough light to record your subject? The red that stands out brilliantly in an early evening color shot will be rendered gray in a black and white photo. Is there enough light to display your subject as you want it rendered?

Source of Light. Is the light source natural? Is your subject directly lit by the primary light source (sun, flash) or is the subject lit by reflection of light from clouds or off a large bright object?

Quality of Light. Direct light produces sharp dark shadows and contrast between light and dark. Diffused light, such as the light of a cloudy day, softens shadows and produces softer tones of gray in your photo.

Direction of Light. The direction of light has affects depth, dimension and detail. Side lighting produces greater dimensional effects. Front lighting reduces texture and depth. Back lighting highlights form and reduces detail.

Other Considerations. In black and white photography, as color is muted, other design elements gain in significance.

  • Shape – Shape is not only defined by the objects depicted but also by blocks of light and dark in the photo.

  • Tone – Tone is conveyed through the use of dark and light in the photograph. Dark toned photographs use shadows and dark gray areas to convey a mood such as sadness, emptiness, etc. Light toned photographs can convey moods such as openness or space.

  • Texture –The surface qualities of the subject give texture to a photograph. Texture can add realism or depth, and the lack of texture can add a mythic or ideal quality to a photo.

  • Lines – Lines give focus and structure to your photograph. Lines draw the viewer’s eye through the photograph. Lines add movement and tension.

  • Patterns – Pattern is the repetition of line and shape. Pattern can give rhythm and structure to a photograph.

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Friday, January 21, 2011

Marketing Travel Photography

Marketing Travel Photography: Four Essential Steps

Part I: Getting Started | Part II: Four Essential Steps
Easier than any other time in history, today you can circumnavigate the globe and take pictures. You can rent cameras, lights, studios, buy film and hire models just about anywhere. You are no longer tied down to real estate or staff. In your pocket, your Blackberry or iPhone will gather all the help you need. And it can all be done on credit. But who eventually pays the bills? The age old problem remains: how do we get our telephone to ring or email in our inbox?
Once upon a time you picked up the phone, called an art director who actually answered. After a little awkward, conversational “foreplay”, you asked to come in and show your portfolio in the hopes of future assignments. The pitch was almost rhetorical and rarely discussed. Even though there was the proverbial “elephant in the middle of the room”, everyone in the loop knew it was a “sales call”. A well-worn, time-honored tradition. In the Golden Age of Advertising, so romantically characterized on the cable television show Mad Men (television drama about the advertising business in the 1960s aired on AMC), armed with a large Rolodex and depending on how aggressive you were, you could display your wares in front of just about anybody. This personal approach worked well. You met your clients and they met you. Relationships were forged and resulted in a very good return on investment. A few cups of very bad coffee and you had a career.
Today the travel market is global and times have certainly changed in the turbocharged world of computers, cell phones and databases but the reasons and motivations remain the same. “The names have been changed to protect the innocent.” (Dragnet. Prod. Jack Webb. NBC, Sndication, ABC. 1951-2004.) I have worked with a myriad of very smart assistants who, in very short order, “know” everything I do: my lighting techniques, my bag of tricks, even the stupid stories I tell subjects to get them to cooperate. Once they get that “lean and hungry look” in their eye, soon they are gone. We try to involve them in the discussions, the process and, of course, the execution of assignments. The time always comes, “What’s the big deal? I know everything that idiot knows.” However, very few learn how to make the phone ring.
Marketing travel photography is not a phone call. That is sales. The term marketing has permeated into our vocabulary, often without any serious reflection of its actual meaning. The American Marketing Association defines marketing as “the activity, set of institutions, and processes for creating, communicating, delivering, and exchanging offerings that have value for customers, clients, partners, and society at large” (www.marketingpower.com). But what does that clarify in the context of travel photography, which is considered highly disposable? In my first column for photo.net, Marketing Travel Photography: Getting Started, I gave an overview of the subject’s complicated nature. In the following text, I will discuss the four essential steps to marketing travel photography effectively: IdentifyDifferentiateAdvertise,Sell. Remember that marketing is never ending process.

I. Identify

Marketing in its most basic form begins with information. The primary question that I ask at every meeting is who is your audience? It is difficult to determine what to do or say unless you know who you are addressing. Who buys photographs? What is their age? Gender? Nationality? Pedigree? What kinds of images interest them and how much are they willing to pay?
Unless you can identify your potential client you are basically “shot gunning” or in other words, casting a wide net and hoping to catch what you can amongst the flotsam and jetsam. My representative used to reiterate that you never know who, when or where you will interact with a customer. The most innocent encounters can result in new business but “shot gunning” is nonetheless usually inefficient and expensive.
Creating tailored mailing lists takes into account different clientele and allows you to concentrate on a particular groups’ needs. This is especially crucial if you are a small company or a freelance photographer who needs to find art directors and editors who give the travel assignments. You can also purchase mailing lists, harvest names and addresses from graphic design award books, join travel business networking groups and, of course, explore Google. Experiment to find methods that are personally effective in targeting your audience. At this developmental stage, it involves ongoing research.
The marketing of travel photography not only begins with information but also trades on information. We want the names and addresses of prospect clients and useful relationships, so that when the occasion arises, we will be privy to any kind of insider trade information such as which agency won a new account or which A/Ds are looking at new portfolios. Early in my career, I ran into a staff person who worked for Boston City Hall who mentioned that they were interviewing photographers for a major position. I ran home made several phone calls and eventually was hired for over a year in what became one of my seminal career jobs. You never know! Many aggressive salespeople believe that they have to pitch constantly, but I got the city job by letting someone else talk.
Remember that reciprocation is also critical and that you must also pass on information. Acquiring but also maintaining clients has a large part to do with how they perceive you as a resource for information they need, whether it is photographers’ names in other cities or the best public relations shooters. My former representative used to offer free estimates for jobs where we were not on the short list. She justified the time spent because my studio was eventually awarded several of those major campaigns. The art buyers trusted her and it paid off enormously.
By the same token, you are also responsible to keep your sources and information relevant. The old fashioned Rolodex, which is destined to become a museum artifact like glass plate negatives or black/white contact sheets, has morphed into computer databases. With these convenient programs, we can merge/purge and reconfigure our lists to keep them up-to-date and serve our particular needs. Like profiling suspects on those high tech, forensic TV shows, software has been developed for cataloguing regions, billings, circulations, and specialties. Even if you still use the backs of napkins, keep track of your information.

II. Differentiate

Vision

Colleges, schools and institutions are graduating over a hundred thousand neophyte photographers yearly and that is only in the United States. What a staggering statistic! It has actually become respectable to be a photographer. So how do you rise above the fray?
Differentiation is one of the most critical steps in separating yourself from the abundance of competition. Besides technique skills or a facility for problem solving, the value of today’s photographer simplifies to his or her vision. This encompasses your approach to the subject and the emotion you attach and subsequently evoke in your photographs. If a publication plans to include an article on nightlife in Prague, they may select your pictures because they conjure a particular mood or make everyone feel part of the scene.

Portfolio

When forging an identity as a powerful photographer, you have to initially create a strong body of work and this is reflected in your portfolio. In the beginning we all cobble together what we think are our best pictures in a book with the objective of showing it to anyone who will look. This selection represents you as a photographer and professional and must instill enough trust to obtain the job. Today, portfolios come in variety of formats that can be loosely divided into hard copy and digital. Every portfolio must be comprised of outstanding images that are well edited, thoughtfully sequenced, and sleekly presented. The higher up the agency ladder, the shorter the art director or editor’s attention span.
The traditional hard copy version is a mainstay of the industry. For editorial clients it can be a fairly simple compilation of exemplary work that includes tear sheets from assignments up to experimental images. The general limit ranges from ten to twenty five images. Most photographers using this method of display will have their core pictures and then have the option to switch out other work to complement the style and content of the magazine. There is nothing worse than wasting an art director’s time by showing irrelevant work.
In advertising, external packaging must befit the content and photographers often seek expert consultation for their portfolio development. A lot more effort is invested in the pure design when you are pursuing agency work. Keep in mind that advertising companies expend millions of dollars for focus research, media buys, production and implementation of an ad campaign. The physical portfolio passes under many critical eyes that must be convinced that you can perform under high pressure.
In both cases you should not be surprised if your portfolio comes back damaged. Busy executives and their minions treat them very cavalierly. After years of learning the hard way, I always fabricate my portfolio so that it is relatively easy to update or replace. The industry gives no quarter!
Despite initial resistance, art directors and editors are utilizing electronics as a resource to discover new talent. Your digital portfolio, otherwise known as your web site, is nowadays the first impression for a new prospect. Web sites of photographers range from simple to elaborate design depending on the pursued market. Following basic portfolio principles the sites should be constructed so that they can be easily navigated. Avoid superfluous tricks such as unnecessary sounds or add-ons that only distract from your work. Long downloads are anathema. Web sites should always be considered works-in-progress that are periodically updated and improved.
Selina Maitreya, a marketing consultant who founded Port Authority, (author of How to Succeed in Commercial Photography, Allworth Press) is a big proponent of web portals where you can purchase space to drive traffic to your web site. Organization portals such as American Society of Media Photographers and Canadian Association of Photographers and Illustrators in Communications , etc. are a good place to start. They tend to be inexpensive and often come with the membership fee.
Unfortunately abroad, the selection of images and photographers is still a hand carried process. It is a cultural difference. Overseas agencies and magazines are not as accepting of images on a computer screen. As a great deal of travel photography is published in Europe and Asia, you need to adjust to their demands.

III. Advertise

Advertising is the public declaration of services. In order to survive we effectively tell the multitudes that we travel and take pictures. The portfolio is personal representation of yourself and, in turn, a subset of advertising but your approach must be more extensive and multifaceted to gain results. Ultimately the point is to attract new business.

Push versus Pull

Marketing travel photography is divided into two main promotional strategies: push and pull. After you profile and target a specific publication, you can approach them directly. You initiated contact. That is push. Usually for push-marketing to be effective you should sell a universally desired product such as wedding photography or have a unique style. If your rep takes the portfolio around or you send out tear sheets, that is push. In the past I have spent enough on postage annually to support a small South American dictatorship. Pull, on the other hand, is broad based and utilizes mass market outlets directed towards hypothetical populations. Examples of this are trade shows, viral marketing, the Yellow Pages and search engine optimization. The purpose is to build up a demand for your photography. Understanding which of push/pull is best suited for you should become the cornerstone of your advertising.

Virtual

With varying degrees of effectiveness, email, online newsletters, blogs and social networks have cultivated the photographer/creative’s landscape. In addition to the invaluable email address, other virtual formats offer a means of sharing your work without “invading their space”. All these formats can be extremely accommodating to the potential client’s schedule.
Harvest email addresses. They are crucial information. An added benefit is that email addresses often follow people as they move around. For many years, I have made a point of sending emails while traveling, usually highly personal, composed of streams of consciousness, real time observations. On the road they go to friends, clients and potential clients with whom I have established a rapport or met recently. Although their writing can be time consuming, they have proved well worth the effort. It is a subtle, entertaining way for me to remind people of my exploits. I once figured out how to send several emails from my hotel room in Havana, Cuba. Imagine the art director opening up some cryptic message from an embargoed country first thing in the morning. It cost a fortune.
Newsletters and “visual emails” with an attached photo or link to your website are also invaluable as buyers can bookmark your website. But critical to this type of marketing is tracking software. It allows you to follow your websites’ click through rates, visitors, most popular pages, etc.
With fifty thousand new pictures coming online each day and the proliferation of Royalty Free Stock, the demand for assignments has been decimated. To combat the effects of RF, some photographers have been successful cutting through the fog with blogs about assignments, philosophy, even demonstrations of shots in progress. Big companies and institutions are exploiting the burgeoning social networks, such as Facebook, mySpace, LinkedIn, Twitter, etc. They are part of a new phenomenon called viral marketing, a virtual, “word-of-mouth” technique where your message is passed along from person to person to generate added exposure. Viral marketing has transformed advertising. So if you package your photography in such a way that it is useful, educational or entertaining enough to others, the Internet may “promote” it exponentially.

Branding

A recent buzz word and form of pull advertising is branding. But what is branding? Branding is the descriptive attributes and concrete symbols that convey the essence of your company, product or service and in turn differentiates you from competition while establishing customer loyalty. To many, branding is as simple as a logo, a name, a trademark or a slogan. However a distinctive and recognizable photographic style, a collection of images and ideas also contribute in establishing a brand. Branding serves to create associations to you and your talent. A brand is the most valuable real estate in your world—that corner of the consumer’s mind.
Quite a while ago a musician colleague told me that every time he shook a fan’s hand was an opportunity for imprinting (his word). He wanted to leave such a strong positive impression that when the fans heard his songs on the radio they were compelled to continue following his music by purchasing a CD or a concert ticket. We have used this fitting analogy in the studio ever since.
Advertising is cumulative. Selina Maitreya suggests there should be four to five ways a buyer can encounter your work and that three to four years are necessary for the association to “live and breathe.” She also adheres to direct mail. In an interview she revealed, “we have twenty percent more brick and mortar addresses in our databases than email addresses. And I advise my photographers to send direct mail four to six times a year.”

IV. Sell

Marketing, advertising and sales are not synonymous. The sequence is strategic development then tactical implementation. Marketing is indirect and has a longer acquisition curve. Marketing supports advertising and in turn promotes sales. In the end you have to make the sale, get someone to buy your pictures.
Once you have done all the prerequisites, your prospect may still not be able to make a decision. Are you reading your audience right? Do they need more information? Most often the biggest obstacle is that you are not talking to the actual decision maker. You cannot sell if you are not communicating with someone who can say yes or no. If you did not make the sale, never leave without determining what action comes next.
In the ninth inning of a baseball game with a one run lead, you need someone who can get the last three outs and shut the other team down. In sports this is called the closer and, in business, it is called closing the deal. Many photographers relish the “game” of designing promotional materials, schmoozing at cocktail parties, finding common ground and connecting with their constituency, but they are uncomfortable actually asking for work. You have to not only do it, but do it well.
Once upon a time I was just starting in this vocation, one mentor instructed me to call art directors and make appointments to ask for work. Like so many shooters before me, I whimpered that I found the task difficult. His advice was that I had to not only set aside time to make the calls on a regular basis, but I had to eventually learn to like it. If you are not proud enough of your work, clients will detect it.

Conclusion

Identify. Differentiate. Advertize. Sell. Rinse and repeat. Making money with photography is an art in more ways than one. It is more than luck or shouting your message louder or with more pixels. When I first began I read everything I could about equipment, technique and business practices. After a while I convinced myself that I knew how to actually take good pictures, bill a job and protect my rights. However, until you actually go out and try—have a visual problem in front of you with an impending deadline or you stuff your book under your arm and knock on a skeptical prospect’s door—everything we have discussed is theoretical. You must try and, most importantly, you must follow up.
I get phone calls from new interns or students wanting to become assistants in my studio, I always insist that they call me back a week or month later. That hurdle eliminates ninety percent of the candidates. Only the truly motivated call back at which time I am glad to give them an appointment. Our clients know the same tactic all too well.
When my studio was attempting to convince maximum security wardens to let us do portraits of men and women on death rows all over the USA, they would always tell us to call back on some specific date. Lorie Savel Borges (my rep at the time) made those follow up calls religiously. Performing an absolutely impossible task she eventually got us into fourteen prisons. It took six years but resulted in my book Final Exposure: Portraits from Death Row. We will deal with more of these marketing issues in the next article on Marketing Travel Photography.

Further Thoughts

The Internet has opened up such a vast practical, virtual library. So many people are willing to share information and brag about their experiences that we can investigate, through Google, youTube and webinars, worlds that were closed to us before.
Gaining practical insight into the selection or decision process is worth its weight in gold. There are several places on the World Wide Web to see how it is all done. Cary Wolinsky, a friend and long time contributor to National Geographic magazine, was asked so often how to approach the illustrious publication that he assembled “Anatomy of a Story” on his web site. It is as close as you can get to the complicated process without getting your own feet wet. Tune into Anatomy of a Story.
There is also a blog very popular with industry insiders www.aphotoeditor.com. It consistently peels off the veil of the often opaque editorial magazine maelstrom. Rob Haggart is/was a photo editor at a major consumer magazine and has taken it upon himself to reveal a lot of the behind the scenes secrets we all can use. One of the web sites he mentions in his blog is how a storyboard evolves at Wired magazine. See http://blog.wired.com/storyboard/.

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Thursday, January 13, 2011

Correctly Expose Your Photographs







Exposure Basics: Correctly Expose Your Photographs

Every picture taking opportunity allows you to record no less than six correct exposures!
Perhaps you have already figured it out after reading the above, but if not, you will soon know that most picture taking situations have at least six possible combinations of f/stops and shutters speeds that will all result in a correct exposure; not a creatively correct exposure but a correct exposure. But only one, sometimes two, of these combinations of f/stops and shutter speeds is the creatively correct motion-filled exposure.
Again, let’s review, that every ‘correct’ exposure is nothing more then the quantitative value of an aperture and shutter speed working together within the ‘confines’ of a predetermined ‘ISO’. For the sake of argument we are both out photographing a city skyline at dusk, using a film speed of 100 ISO and an aperture opening of f/5.6 and whether we are shooting in manual mode or aperture priority mode the light meter indicates a correct exposure at 1 second. What other combinations of aperture openings (f/stops) and shutter speeds can we use and still record a ‘correct’ exposure? If I suggest we use an aperture of f/8 what would the shutter speed now be? Since we have cut the lens opening in half (f/5.6 to f/8) I will now need to double my shutter speed time to two seconds to record a correct exposure, (1 sec + 1 sec= 2 seconds.) On the other hand, If I suggested that we use an aperture of f/4 what would the shutter speed now be? Since we have just doubled the size of the lens opening (f/5.6 to f/4) I will now need to cut my shutter speed in half (1/2 second) to record the same ‘quantitative value exposure’.
Easy yet hard, right?
For a refresher on these terms, take a look at Bryan’s intro article on Aperture, Shutter Speed, and ISO

The Equations

The following are equivalent:
  • f/4 at 1/2 second
  • f/5.6 at 1 second
  • f/8 at 2 seconds
  • f/11 at 4 seconds
  • f/16 at 8 seconds
  • f/22 at 16 seconds
Add them up and what have you got? Six possible combinations of aperture and shutter speeds that will all result in exactly the same exposure. I want to stress the word ‘same’; it is meant to mean the ‘same’ in terms of quantitative value only!
Likewise, if we find ourselves taking an outdoor portrait at the park with our telephoto zoom, we find that with our aperture set to f/16 and with an ISO of 100, a correct exposure is indicated at a shutter speed of a 1/125 second (s). If I suggest we use an aperture of f/8, what would the shutter speed now indicate as a correct exposure? If you said 1/500s, you are correct, which also means that you know at f/22 the correct exposure would be a 1/60s and at f/11 1/250s and at f/5.6 your shutter speed would now be 1/1000s. Again, why all the ‘fuss’; what difference does it really make which combinations of apertures and shutter speeds we use as long as the meter indicates a correct exposure?
Knowing that every picture taking opportunity offers you no less than six possible aperture/shutter speed combinations in and of itself may seem immaterial, but when you consider the impact of the creative possibilities influenced by the shutter speed (freezing actions, implying motion or panning) and aperture (a great depth of field, or a background of muted tones and/or out of focus foregrounds) you will have a much greater appreciation for why you are choosing that particular shutter speed and aperture combination. The reason willnot be simply because you want to record a correct exposure, but rather because you wanteach and every time to record the CREATIVELY CORRECT EXPOSURE! The difference between a “correct exposure” and a “creatively correct exposure” is often huge! Let’s take a look!
Let’s pretend we’ve invited ten other photographers to join us in capturing this scene and we break into three groups:
  • One third of the group shot this scene at f/11 for four seconds
  • Another third shot the scene at a f/8 for a two seconds
  • The remaining third shot the scene at f/5.6 for 1 second.
You know what? All of us just shot the exact same correct exposure! Even though each group’s f/stops and shutter speeds were different, the end result was the same; the quantitative value of each group’s exposures are the same. It doesn’t matter if you are photographing with a film-based camera or a digital camera, you must learn and embrace a simple fact; every picture taking opportunity offers you no less then six possible aperture/shutter speed combinations. Why must you know this? Even though each group has the ‘same’ exposure, the motion-filled opportunity that each group captured may look radically different. Knowing that each motion-filled exposure opportunity offers up six possible combinations is a start but knowing which one of two exposures best conveys or capture the motion before is the key. Once you are armed with this knowledge you can begin to fully explore the truly endless road of creatively correct motion-filled exposures!
Now let’s imagine that we all awoke the following morning, once again splitting into three groups and we all head into a flower garden. All of us are armed with our telephoto zooms and we are going to record correct exposures of a single flower bloom.
  • One third of the group shoots that lone flower at a correct exposure of f/4 at 1/1000s.
  • Another third of the group at f/8 at 1/250s.
  • The last third of the group shot that same flower at f/16 at 1/60s.
Fifteen minutes later we all get together and compare results and guess what? Every one of us has recorded the ‘same’ and correct exposure in terms of its quantitative value, but, each group also recorded a visually different yet correct exposure. The visual difference is the keyto understanding the difference between a correct exposure and a creatively correct exposure. Although the quantitative value of each exposure was the same, the aperture choices were different and therein lies the visual difference. Depth of field increases each and every time we stop the lens down and in the case of the flower composition, the smaller apertures recorded a greater depth of field than did the aperture of f/4. Again, the exposures taken by all three groups were the same quantitative value but visually they were quite different solely due to the aperture choice.
So to recap: there are six possible aperture and shutter speed combinations that will result in the correct exposure, yet only one, maybe two, is in fact the “creatively correct” exposure. It is that one creatively correct exposure that gives you the precise depth of field you were hoping to achieve or that one creatively correct exposure that gives the the precise action stopping shutter speed or the precise shutter speed that guarantees a motion-filled image, e.g. the cotton candy effect often seen in waterfall compositions.
Let’s take a real world look at just how different a correct exposure is versus that of a “creatively” correct exposure.

Exercise 1: Flower Composition

Head outside with your camera set to 200 ISO and a telephoto lens, say a 200mm, and frame up a flower. Once you focus on the flower, shoot six correct exposures, each one using a different aperture and shutter speed. For example, with the aperture set to f/4, you get a correct exposure indication at 1/1000s. Shoot this one exposure and than move on to f/5.6 and then shoot another at 1/500s, f/8 at 1/250s and another at f/11 at 1/125 second, f/16 at 1/60s and finally another at f/22 at 1/30s. You will soon see that all six exposures are correct in their quantitative value, but radically different in their “visual weight”. Note in just these two examples where the first image was shot at f/5.6 at 1/500 second and the second image shot at f/22 at 1/30s. They are the “same” exposure in their quantitative value, but oh my, look at how much busier the background is in the correct exposure taken at f/22 versus the much cleaner and more isolated flower composition of the correct exposure taken at f/5.6 at 1/500s.
All three of these images are exactly the same exposure (Images 3, 4, and 5). Their quantitative volume of aperture, (light) and shutter speed (duration of time) is exactly the same, yet you can clearly see that visually they are each different. All three photographs were taken with my tripod mounted Nikon D2X and 200mm Micro-Nikkor lens.
Image 3 was taken at f/5.6 at a 1/500 second, Image 4 was taken at f/11 at 1/125s and Image 5 was taken at f/22 at 1/30s. Again, their quantitative values are identical, which is to say that the volume of light that passed through the lens and the amount of time that light was allowed to render an image on the CCD or film was the same. When I composed all three of these images, they looked exactly the same inside my cameras viewfinder. Yet when I reviewed these same three exposures on the camera’s digital monitor, they were clearly different and that difference in this case was with their backgrounds.
In Image 3, the background is limited to subtle out-of-focus tones, color and very few shapes. In Image 4, the background begins to offer up a bit more information in both shapes and sharper tones and by Image 5, it’s ‘clear’ that the background, consists of other nearby flowers due to the much greater defined shapes and tones that are presented. All three are the same exposure, but as is often the case, only one, and sometimes two, are the “creatively” correct exposure.

Use of Motion

When capturing this simple composition of an S-curve on Interstate 5 approaching downtown Seattle, I was presented with six possible options of recording a correct exposure, three of which you see here (Images 6, 7, and 8). In terms of their ‘quantitative value’, all three of these images are exactly the same exposure, BUT one can clearly see that they are vastly different in their creative exposure, with the creative emphasis on the use of motion. It has and will always be my goal to present motion-filled opportunities in the most motion-filled way and more often than not when there is a motion filled scene, the longer the exposure time, the greater the motion is conveyed. In our first example, Image 6 was captured at f/4 for 1/2s, Image 7 was shot at f/8 for 2s and Image 8 was shot at f/16 for 8s. All three of these exposures were made with my Nikon D2X and Nikkor 200-400mm zoom at the focal length of 400mm, mounted on tripod with my ISO set to 100 and my WB set to Cloudy.

An exercise such as this is truly eye-opening. The next time you head out the door to shoot city lights at dusk, there won’t be a lot of hesitation on your part about using the slower shutter speeds, since by this example, the slowest shutter speed exposure had the best effect. (I am assuming that you prefer the third image, the image taken at f/22 for 8s and just so there is no confusion, this is not ‘bracketing’ since they are all the same exposure in terms of their quantitative value. I will cover bracketing and other issues related to “where should I take my meter reading” in a future article).

Going to Extremes with Shutter Speed

As you begin to digest more and more this simple rule of exposure, it will soon become clear that the need to pay attention to what aperture choice or shutter speed choice will in fact lead you to conclude that there is but one truly creatively correct exposure most of the time and this is particularly true as you begin to notice that the world offers up an unlimited supply of motion-filled opportunities. When capturing these motion filled opportunities you will find yourself, more often than not, on either end of the shutter speed spectrum; using fast shutter speeds to freeze the action in crisp sharp detail or using slow shutter speeds and the resulting blur to suggest or imply the motion present. There is rarely a ‘middle ground’ when it comes to the motion-filled world and with that in mind, it won’t be long before you discover that most of your time is being spent on action-filled scenes between 1/500s and 1/1000s OR between 1/4s to 8s.
With my camera and 80-400mm Nikkor zoom mounted on tripod and the lens set to 300mm, I captured Image 9 at f/4 and 1/500s. Image 10 was shot at f/22 and 1/15s. Both exposures are exactly the same in terms of quantitative value, BUT quite different in the arena of ‘creative exposure’. Note how at the wide open aperture of f/4 (Image 9) the splash is frozen in crisp sharp detail but at f/22 (Image 10) that same splash is much more ethereal.
Recording a correct exposure will always be your responsibility, so why not make it a point to make the most deliberately and visually compelling ‘creative’ exposure possible!?

Exercise 2: Motion-Filled Exposures

One of the best lessons I know of is one that I have offered up to countless students over the years in my on-location workshops and at my on-line photography school www.ppsop.net. It is a very revealing lesson and not surprisingly will lead you further into the world of creatively correct motion-filled exposures. Choose a moving subject, such as a waterfall or a child on a swing or shoot something as simple as someone pounding a nail into a piece of wood.
With your camera set to Aperture Priority Mode, your ISO set to 100, (or 200 ISO if that is the lowest your camera offers) and your aperture set to wide open, (f/2.8, f/3.5 or f/4) take an image of the action before you. You have just recorded an exposure at the fastest possible shutter speed based on the ISO in use, the light that is falling on your subject and of course your use of the largest lens opening. Now stop the lens down one full stop, (if you started at an aperture of f/2.8 then go to f/4 and if your lens starts with f/4 then go to f/5.6) and once again take another exposure of the action filled subject. Repeat this each time with the aperture set next to f/8, then f/11, then f/16 and finally f/22. Each time you change the aperture by what is called a ‘full stop’, your camera does a quick recalculation and offers up the ‘new’ shutter speed to maintain a correct exposure and since you are stopping the lens down with each full stop change in aperture, (making the hole in the lens half as big as it was before) your shutter speed has now doubled in time to compensate, or in other words, your shutter speed is becoming progressively slower. The slower your shutter speed the more likely it is that your action filled subject before you is showing signs of ‘blurring’, since the shutter speed is too slow to ‘freeze it’.

Conclusion

To re-cap, the fastest possible shutter speed with any given ISO will always be found when you use the largest lens opening and the slowest possible shutter speed (barring the use of any filters) will always be found when you use the smallest lens opening.
There is one thing I hope you will never forget after reading this article: correct exposures can be found just about anywhere, but why settle for just a correct exposure when you can in fact record a truly creatively correct exposure each and every time? You really can take charge of your own creative vision when it comes to exposure!

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