I had someone ask me what my keep to throw away ratio was while shooting. I told them that it was somewhere around 5-10%. And then they asked me, "Is that good". I responded with, "What does that mean"? I think the definition of good is not something that one person can tell another in respect to how many shots a photographer keeps out of any given shoot. If you keep ten or fifty it does not matter. Neither one makes you good or bad at what you do. We all have our own style.
Typically when I go out on a shoot I will bring a small 1GB card so I can limit myself to the amount of images that can be shot. In my mind I think using a bigger card like say a 8GB allows you to spray and pray too much and that can make you a bit weak overall. When using a 1GB card I will constantly delete images while I am shooting to make more room just by taking a quick glance at them. If they do not strike me right away they get pushed off the cliff to join the rest of the garbage.
Once I get home and upload them to be edited.......now that is where the real OCD starts. I glance over every single image (which will not be over 63 since I use a 1GB card) and if any of them stands out and says "I DON'T APPEAL TO YOU" well, It joins the rest of the garbage too. Of the remaining survivors I will go thru and do a quick edit on all of them to make them pop a bit more. After that I go back to step one.....and to the garbage bin they go. By now I am usually down to about 20-30 shots. This is where the strongest fight to survive. I will go more in depth and start really editing them down and then I can see which ones have the most weakness. Then guess what? GARBAGE!! By the end of all this madness I force myself to delete all but 10-15 even if one of them seems like it looks good. I only want to keep the strongest.
This all might seem a bit crazy to some but it makes sense to me. It is my style. I am sure I have deleted a more than a few good shots that could have sold or that could have been liked by someone else but that is the price I pay. I think we all have our own way of doing most things in life and there is no wrong or right way. In the end, the only thing that matters is you.
This is a blog site from a Cincinnati, Ohio photographer. Most of the content is photography related but not all of it. This blog is just a small door into a regular ol' artistic minded photo nut.
How many people wasted time here
Sunday, October 28, 2012
Wednesday, August 8, 2012
Ripley Ohio Bicentennial time capsule opening.
I took the short trip back to my old stomping grounds to see what was inside of this 100 year old time capsule. Apparently back in 1912 they thought it would be a good idea to crimp the lid shut..............not such a good idea. Anyone who lives or has lived by the river knows that it floods at least every few years and a crimped lid under the ground will not last more than a few years let alone one hundred. There were still some neat things in there that survived the water damage. Here is a sneak peak at the items.
Sunday, March 11, 2012
Moscow, Ohio. The tornado aftermath.
I walked from one end of town to the other and you can almost see exactly where the tornado came from and went to. It is an amazing site. I only stayed for about an hour. I did not want to make people feel as if I were intruding. On the way out I stopped by the smallest church I could find and talked to the pastor who was standing outside offering water and food for free. Instead of taking anything from him I gave him all the money in my pocket and told him to give it to who ever he wants or spend it on more resources. They need it more than I do. We take for granted what we have and today was a wake up call for me personally. If you can I would ask you to donate what ever you can to the town.
Here are 15 images from what I seen.
Labels:
2012,
documented,
Moscow Ohio,
tornado
Location:
Moscow, OH 45153, USA
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