Vacation Shooting
In my analysis of what I shoot and where I shoot photographs, it is quite clear that I do, indeed, have a restricted range of times and subjects. This has becomes even painfully obvious to me after meeting with professional and very avid photographic enthisiasts. These latter photographers place a high value in going to places which maximize their chances of some great photographs, e.g., shooting volcanic eruptions from helicopters or from boats at sea, not to mention just taking off at the spur of a moment (on a flight several hundred miles away) to capture the Northern Lights over a particularly interesting foreground object.
“You must go to interesting places to take interesting photographs,” is what I am told. I do not doubt this, but there is a rebellious element/genie within me which says that there are great and wondrous moments all around oneself if one is open to seeing them. I truly believe this also. However, placing oneself in a propitious place is far easier than searching out the miraculous moment in the ordinary.
Such is the conflicted state I find myself in: Do I devote more time and energy into placing myself in places which will yield good photographs? Or, do I continue to make escapes or vacations to places which may produce opportunities for good shots, or do I go the extra mile to shoot, trying to find the miraculous in the ordinary?
The currently posted shot if of the USS Arizona taken while on vacation to Hawaii. I was lucky to actually get a ticket to travel to the monument, but when I got there it was so crowded that trying to capture the solemnity of the place where so many died was almost impossible. Added to this situation was the fact that I had on a 70-200m lens (because I could not take my other gear because bags were not allowed on the boat to the monument). I was forced to shoot with the canon 70-200mm lens. And then “take out” some visitors peering through the openings along the monument side using Photoshop.
The current shot was taken with a Canon 5 DS, EF70-200mm f/4L IS USM @ 70mm, f/10, 1/60″, -1/3 stop, 200 ISO, using DxO Optics Pro, a gradient map, and Color Efex Pro.
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