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Kinds of Photography |
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What kind of camera you use should be determined by the kind of photography you plan to do. You can do street photography with a box camera, and in fact, in the early part of the twentieth century some of the greatest street photographs in the history of photography were made with equipment a lot less sophisticated than the modern equivalent of a box camera. But it’s much easier to do that kind of work with a camera built for the job. I’m sure some of the greatest pictures of all time were missed back then because the equipment was so balky and complicated.
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Family photography
Even if you don’t have a digital camera at the
moment, you
can make digital copies of your photographs by scanning them. If you have
priceless family historical photographs I urge you to scan them and put them on CDs
or DVDs. If you have the negatives, scan those. The quality will be better.
If not, scan the prints. The photographs will deteriorate over time but the digital
copies won’t – at least not in the immediate future. A good CD or DVD should last for
at least 70 years and before those 70 years are up the onward rush of computer
science is going to bring us storage media that will last for 700 or 7,000
years. If you save the stuff now your descendents may bless you. (Then, again,
who knows?)
If you do family photography you’ll probably want to make
prints. Since you can print directly onto 8 ½ by 11 sheets with an inkjet
printer it’s pretty easy to make compact, comb-bound books that hold up much better
under handling than photo albums with paste-in corners that fall out along with
the pictures as soon as a grandkid starts flipping through the book.
The other thing you can do with digital family photographs
is make reduced size, reduced resolution digital copies and e-mail them to
other family members.
You can do good family photography with just about any
modern camera. They all have more than the minimum requirements you need to do
the job.
Street Photography
Street photography is my favorite kind of photography. The
world is full of interesting people doing interesting things – out there on the
street. To me, and I’m sure Eugene Atget and Walker Evans would agree, street
photography also includes photographs of interesting structures: architecture,
surreal relationships between people and structures, and
what the Japanese call “wabi sabi:” the beauty produced in ordinary things by time, nature and
use.
To do street photography properly you take a small camera
out into the madding crowd and LOOK! You need to be very familiar
with your equipment because you usually have only a second or so to line up
your shot and shoot.
To see what street photography is all about read Bystander,
A History of Street Photography by Colin Westerbrook and Joel Meyerowitz,
1994, Bullfinch. Of all the books in my collection of photo books it’s
my favorite.
Photojournalism
Photojournalism is street photography that tells a story,
usually in a series of pictures but sometimes in a single picture. There are a
bunch of people in Iraq and Afghanistan doing photojournalism as I write this. Here’s a shot I
made in Taegu, Korea in 1953. It’s one of those single
pictures that tells a story.
Wildlife
There’s lots of wildlife in Florida – even right here in
Hawthorne. To do that kind of photography you take a camera – a single lens
reflex (SLR) is a good choice – and go out in the morning before your community
is stirring. If you’re going to shoot a turtle you need to become
friendly with him so he won’t retreat so far into his shell that he becomes
anonymous. If you’re going to shoot a bird on the wing, run the zoom lens out
to its full extension and walk toward him softly. Figure out which direction
the bird is likely to fly (usually into the wind) and be ready to shoot as he
goes by. With turtles you usually have time to fool around with your camera
before you’re ready to shoot. With birds you need the same kind of familiarity
with your equipment you need for street photography.
Scenery
There’s lots of that in Florida too. Unless you decide you
want to give Ansel Adams a run for his money, you can do good scenery work with
any mid-range camera, but not with a bottom of the line digital camera. In most
cases, but not always, detail is important in scenery shots. Some of the most famous photographers at the
turn of the twentieth century would have argued with that statement. They tried
to subdue detail and make their photographs look like Impressionist paintings.
But that misconception passed away when, in the twenties and thirties, Edward
Weston demonstrated how beautiful straight photography could be. A digital
camera with less than about six megapixels (three million pixels) just
doesn’t have the resolution to do the job.
If you do decide to give Ansel Adams a run for his
money, look around for an 11 by 14 inch view camera, a big, sturdy tripod, a
bunch of 11 by 14 inch film holders, a bunch of slow, fine-grain sheet film,
and a full, temperature-controlled darkroom. There’s no small camera, film or
digital, that can produce the kind of stunning detail Ansel was able to get
with his very large, very cumbersome equipment.
Commercial photography
If you’re a commercial photographer or you’re about to
become one you don’t need any advice from me. You’ll have decided what kind of
commercial work you want to do and you’ll have a good idea of what equipment
you need to do it. Commercial work can range all the way from portraiture to
photographs of industrial processes. Some of it is very specialized.