“The purpose of art is washing the dust off the daily life of our souls.”
– Picasso
January 30, 2017
Collective PostFor our last post in January we wanted to include all our contributors work in a single post to introduce you all to their families and shooting styles at once. Going forward our contributors will be split into two groups, each with a collaborative post published once a month. But once more, all together:
“I don’t want life to imitate art. I want life to be art.”
-Carrie Fisher
Why I Started a 365 Photography Project in 2010 (and Never Stopped)
Contributor Articles“There simply are not many grand moments of life, and we surely don’t live life in those moments. No, we live life in the utterly mundane. We exist in the bathrooms, bedrooms, living rooms, and hallways of life. This is where the character of our life is set. This is where we live the life of faith.”
-Paul David Tripp
When I first started taking pictures ten years ago, my husband told me about a man who started taking a picture a day and then continued that for the rest of his life. My husband’s suggestion that I do something similar was met with a raised eyebrow and me telling him that sounded weird and hard and frankly, a little boring.
Fast forward a few years after I’d learned quite a bit more about photography, I decided taking one picture a day for a year didn’t sound quite so weird. I had read testimonies of people who said how much their photography improved during a 365 project, but even though I wanted my photos to be better, I wasn’t sure if I was up for the big commitment. So I kept putting it off.
In early February of 2010, a friend close in age to me was diagnosed with cancer and not given much time to live. It was shocking and sobering. It made me realize how often I put off doing things until the “right” time and that I wasted way too much time waiting on something bigger or better to happen without enjoying the present. I started my first 365 the following Monday.
The project was fun, but it was so hard! I’m pretty sure I complained about it a lot. Taking a picture a day was easy, but taking a good picture was much harder. Even though my pictures didn’t seem to get better, I still kept at it. My camera went everywhere with me. All my friends knew about my project and didn’t seem bothered that I frequently took pictures around them. Having a camera at my face became my new normal. At the end of that year, I made a photo book with all 365 pictures, and there was something almost magical about seeing my entire year in a book. Seeing all the pictures together made any complaints about the project disappear. It’s amazing how something as simple as a picture can hold so many memories. With each turn of the page, there was a memory and I was transported back to that day. I could remember exactly how I felt when I took that picture.
When January 2011 rolled around, I was hooked and knew that I wanted to do another one. Then, I continued on in 2012. And then in 2013. I just couldn’t stop. It was addicting. I even did a 365 of just self portraits one year, but I promised myself I would never ever do another one of those again.
The first year or two, I was concerned about taking “good” pictures. However, now I’m much better at scanning a scene, taking a picture, and feeling confident that it’s a decent picture in one or two shots. I feel like my 365 project fits well within the documentary photography category because I’m documenting my family’s entire year. I don’t clean up messes, and I just photograph my life how it is. I seek to document the small moments and imperfections that make my family who we are. Truth be told, I don’t take many amazing photos nor is my life that exciting. Other people might not think much of my pictures, but each one holds a memory for me. Some memories are painful, and some make me smile when I see them.
Over the past seven years, I’ve photographed some of my highest highs and some of my lowest lows – the “grand moments of life” per the quote at the beginning of this article. But the majority of my pictures remind me of ordinariness of most times because that’s the life I live. Days with Lego creations in the living room floor, school work scattered on the table, an abandoned half folded pile of laundry on my bed, and with a reheated (yet once again cold) coffee cup in the microwave. My daily photos include pictures from grocery stores, public restrooms, parks, doctor offices, hospitals, and post offices. I take pictures of almost all of it – the good, the bad, and everywhere in between.
Taking daily pictures for this long has forced me to be more creative with my pictures and to seek out the beautiful, little things in my life. Obviously, I take many of the same photos over and over. Some days I try to shoot the same subject in a different manner. Other days I go for taking the same sort of photo to show the passage of time. I have a whole series of my son standing at the glass front door in our old house watching the world just beyond the door. As I flip through them, you can see him getting taller and taller as the seasons change in the background.
When this article is published, I will have taken at least one picture a day for 2,527 days in a row. I’ve completed nine 365s (I did a 365 of just my son and one of self portraits concurrently with a normal yearly one). I haven’t missed a day yet, but I won’t beat myself up if I do. I also have no idea when I’ll stop. I’ve considered taking a break so many times, especially during those long periods of uninspired photos, but something makes me continue.
Taking a photo each day is second nature to me now, and it’s not something I have to remind myself to do anymore. It would be strange not to take a picture every day.
In my mind the photo books I make at the end of the year are a time capsule for my family that, years from now, we can look through and remember how it really was. Many people might not understand why I take pictures of things like dirty dishes piled in my sink. To most, it probably looks like I just need to clean up. But to me, I see the dishes from the cake I baked for my son’s birthday. His favorite color was red that year, so we compromised on a red velvet cake instead of a white cake with red icing. Years from now these photos will help me to remember how he played with Legos every day, and became obsessed with Star Wars in 2016 so he wore a Darth Vader costume everyday for a month, or that special bond he had with his great grandmother.
My son enjoys looking through the books now because he likes seeing pictures of himself and hearing stories from when he was little. Maybe someday my grandkids or great grandkids will flip through my photo books and have a better idea of how their weird grandmother/great grandmother saw life.
Community Critique – Jenni
Community CritiqueToday we have an image critique from Jenni who describes herself as an amateur enthusiast. She snagged this image of her son sneaking a peek at the TV while he should have been getting ready for bed with her iPhone. Critique today comes from Heather, Lacey and Natasha.
Heather:
I love that instead of missing the moment that you grabbed the camera that you had on hand. This has a great balance to it. It feels evenly weighted. The lighting is really good. You have a light coming from the left to light your hubby and the light coming from behind your son. I would love to see what they are both looking at included in the frame. I know stepping back or to the side is not always an option inside our homes. It would be fun if you could plan to wait for this moment to happen again and have your big camera ready. I would love to see it with a narrow aperture to have them both in focus. It is such a fun moment. Great photo!
Lacey:
This is such a great moment of your son peeking in on your husband. You can really feel that it is happening at night when he should definitely already be in bed. It’s a moment so many of us as parents can relate to! For your composition you did a great job framing your son in the stairwell, so that he is all in meaning that his arm isn’t cut off by the edge of the frame and you shot from high enough of an angle that the posts are not coming out of the top of his head. I also like that you did not cut off the posters and that they are fully included in the frame. However, I think if you changed your angle and gotten a bit higher you could have included all of your husband’s legs in the shot, as well as, gotten a better angle on the arm of the couch that is in the bottom right of the image (or been able to cut it out completely).
The lighting works well to help balance the image. Your husband has light falling on him from the left which helps illuminate him as he sits in the middle of the dark couch. Your son has the opposite effect, where he is wearing dark clothing and in relative shadow and the background behind him is very bright. The color palette is also very restrained with only the primary colors in play. Dark blue is the predominate color represented in the couch and throw pillows, the pajamas, and the poster. Red is also repeated throughout in the posters, your husband’s shirt, and son’s top. Then there are just hints of yellow with your son’s hair and pajama bottoms.
My favorite iphone app to edit on is the Filmborn app by Mastin Labs. Its camera makes it easy to adjust exposure and color temp in the moment and then its editing tools after the fact can really help push an image to the next level. I recommend downloading the app and playing around with this image to see if you can use color theory to really bring out the underlying strengths of the image.
Natasha:
You have captured a good moment here! I like the story it tells – I’m imagining your son having been tucked up in to bed, only to then sneak down those stairs behind him & peek in on his Dad. I think that you did a good job on the framing. From the look of the chair arm in the bottom right corner, I’m going to assume that this restricted you from getting slightly further back so as not to crop your husbands feet. Sometimes decisions have to be made about what is more important to keep in the frame, & I think you made the right decision ensuring that your son was all in the frame, as opposed to slicing part of him out of the frame to ensure your husbands feet are in the frame. for your restrictions, you have composed this well, keeping the tops of the framed pictures in, your son’s head framed by the base of the stairwell(not slicing through his head), having your husbands legs coming out of the bottom left corner of the frame & the arm of the couch out of the right hand corner. It’s well balanced. I think that it is great that you chose to take the photo with your iphone rather than miss the moment because you didn’t have your DSLR – I am a firm believer that it doesn’t matter what you use to capture photos, if you are using the same principles of composition & story that you would while using a a DSLR. This is not a scene that would have benefited from a shallow depth of field, so the iphone was perfect for this. Using the editing tools on your phone, in an app or exporting your iphone photo into LR can really help to enhance the colours in your photo & to give it that final polish to take it from being just an iphone photo to making what you used to take the photo irrelevant.
*****
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January 16, 2017 – Get in the Frame
Collective PostWe wanted to take the month of January to acquaint and reacquaint all of you with our contributors starting with this, our first collaborative post of 2017. This post features self portraits of each of our contributors in their homes and/or with their families. After all, if you are documenting your own family it’s important that you appear in at least a few frames as well.
“Self portraits are a way of revealing something about one’s self.”
– Eric Kandel