10 Trails To Photograph

We asked the Flickr group what trails they found this summer while hiking, or just going for a walk.  Below are 10 trails that inspired the photographers to capture.

If you want to comment on an individual photograph click on an image to be taken to it directly on Flickr. We all appreciate the feedback. You can find out more about our flickr group here.

In no particular order…

1. Mark
[Trail. Run.]

2. Lee
186 of 366

3. Old One Eye
Mom

4. Chris
Path

5. istevenxue
Ones fromt the L

6. Shaun
20120121-_MG_1505

7. Dipayan
Lighting Around

8. Donnie
Franklin County View

9. Alan
Lights Trails on The Strand

10. Hugo
The edge of paradise

Anyone can take part in our monthly Flickr themes! Check out our previous themes and find out more: 7×5 Flickr group page.

Photo Profile: Ian George Burden

Hello Seven-by-Fivers!

I came across the quote by Henry David Thoreau “It’s not what you look at but what you see” and think it is one of the best ways to describe any photographer who has the eye and even a few that don’t.

However, being born and bred in the outskirts of the city of Edinburgh, it played on my head in many ways. One of my earliest memories of eye-catching imagery was the bombarding of subliminal cigarette advertising on billboards whilst going to and from the city when I was traveling a school kid and eventually an employee. Sad as it seems but those ads tortured my young head into getting their messages of killing you. It took me a few years to fully understand that these make you stop and contemplate their clever motifs. The whisky and the beers of Scotland also used mega photography budgets to get inside your head.

photo-profile-ian-george-burden-01

© Ian George Burden

My first investment in my own hobby of photography was in the shape of a Nikon FE2 in 1986. I used a lot of slides and black and white back then and I used darkrooms until fairly recently. Printing your own shots in BW has something to say for itself that those who do it will know of. We’ve come a very long way in the last ten years in digital and I’m thankful that the darkroom’s volatile chemistry is a thing of the past as well.

My first real paid job in photography (1996) was using tape slide where I (and others) synchronized up to 9 projectors at a time with Dolby surround to recreate cinematic quality. Edinburgh Filmhouse was one of our venues I had the pleasure to exhibit those projects and it lit the audiovisual storyteller in me.

Today, I also have the dream come true of cinematic quality video in my HDSLR’s. It’s so nice to be using the same camera for everything.

photo-profile-ian-george-burden-02

© Ian George Burden

Prime lenses and sexy post production software, as well as this millennium’s processing power, has literally turned me on. I am not ashamed to admit that today’s equipment gets me hot to use it for both photography and videography. I travel a bit and document and lot of those journeys for myself and occasionally for blogs and SEO content.

It’s a bit cliché, I know, but I’ve found that when you are truly into something you love you attract the right people and toys towards you. I know a lot of great photographers and cinematographers who kindly passed on wee bits of their knowledge over the years. I never went to school for it. It was only by getting out there and doing it with decent kit in all weathers, times and finding motifs. The rest was already there and I think my photography proves that.

On my own stock, I can’t really say that there’s ANYTHING I haven’t photographed well…yet.

Links:
Blog: http://fishistories.blogspot.fi/
Website: http://www.shplendid.com
YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/user/rathershplendid

21 Glimpses of the Sun

As the sun rises up north to heat up the sky and land this summer and pulls back to cool other areas of the world, no matter where we reach – the sun keeps on shining. Below are ’21 Glimpses of the Sun’ we gathered from the submissions to our Flickr group.

If you want to comment on an individual photograph click on an image to be taken to it directly on Flickr. We all appreciate the feedback. You can find out more about our flickr group here.

In no particular order…

1. Becky
Sun on Fire

2. shoeless LindaB
Sunworshipper

3. Alan Dow
Sunset over Liver Buildings

4. dbnunley
Heat

5. iamsrook
Sky in reds

6. begumidast
You and I

7. tobyct
Sun Rise Sun Burst

8. MustGoFaster
Her First Sunset

9. H. Jacquet
Eternal lighthouse for all

10. höRticuLtora
Untitled

11. thelearningcurvedotca
Toronto Distillery District 03

12. claudio.von.grubens
IMG_0025

13. Shamrockah
Spearing The Sun

14. dthomasd
Sunrise at the City Beach

15. ©mlphoto
Sun

16. dthomasd
sun flare

17. mr__fox
Volcanic Sun

18. SpecialKRB
sun sets

19. KMG Captures
Sun, Sea and Clouds: iPad Sunset...

20. Gusbano
Rage against the sun

21. limstyle
Kissing The Sun

Anyone can take part in our monthly Flickr themes! Check out our previous themes and find out more: 7×5 Flickr group page.

25 Shades of Yellow

We felt that June radiated the color of yellow, and asked our Flickr group members to share what yellow they found in their world. Below is ’25 shades of yellow’ we gathered from the submissions to our Flickr group.

If you want to comment on an individual photograph click on an image to be taken to it directly on Flickr. We all appreciate the feedback. You can find out more about our flickr group here.

In no particular order…

1. Becky
Little Yellow Details

2. Mark Kalan

3. shoeless LindaB
Ladybug Larva

4. photoopolis

5. tobyct
Rape Seed Field

6. Shamrockah
Curvation

7. scott.williams
Blizzard '11

8. Thomas Cole Simmonds
Chessie King 00004

9. Maurice Ramsbottom

10. DaveFrost

11. paul downing
Yellow Growth.

12. Claudio Paillalef S.
yellow

13. awieme1
Yellow Feathers

14. Paul_NI
Yellow Flower

15. Sascha**
Yellow evening.

16. John Andreas Olsson
Yellow Chief

17. Steve Stanger
yellow flowers on the dune

18. paul downing
Hang Yellow.

19. Graham Baker LSWPP
Blue Yellow - Wide Huts

20. ©mlphoto…
Blue to yellow

21. iBSSR
RED YELLOW AND MORNING LIGHT

22. Edwin’s Mixed Bag
Who's Afraid of Black, Yellow and Blue

23. Grant is a Grant
Decade Filtered

24. ©mlphoto…
Wings bokeh

25. Cicerophoto
Rose

Anyone can take part in our monthly Flickr themes! Check out our previous themes and find out more: 7×5 Flickr group page.

Top 17 Favorite Bird Photos

For the month of May, we asked our Flickr group members to use their creativity in capturing the birds in their world. Below is our top 17 favorite photos we gathered from the submissions to our Flickr group.

If you want to comment on an individual photograph click on an image to be taken to it directly on Flickr. We all appreciate the feedback. You can find out more about our flickr group here.

In no particular order…

1. Becky
Pelican Wings

2. begumidast
I will keep my colors!!

3. KFrench
It's only when you're flying above it that you realize how incredible the Earth really is. ~ Philippe Perrin~

4. pr2is
Hawk stare

5. DaveFrost

6. tciriello
White-Naped Crane

7. Shamrockah
What the Duck?

8. purpleface
Robin

9. Jill Sawyer Phypers
Owl

10. Seldom Scene Photography
My ever-hungry friend, revisited

11. Rhonda Parrish
So Fluffy

12. Navicore
Dirty Camera Bird

13. piet-psch
flown species

14. SPQ PHOTOGRAPHY
Robin in Snow_(Dec2010)

15. Yael P
IMG_0169

16. csabatokolyi
Hoopoe

17. csabatokolyi
Disagreement

Anyone can take part in our monthly Flickr themes! Check out our previous themes and find out more: 7×5 Flickr group page.

Photo Profile: Davide Luciano

Looking back at my childhood everything makes perfect sense, I spent countless hours playing with toys, creating stories and imagining different scenarios. Today, nothing has changed except my toys have been replaced by friends, family and models and I create large-scale photographic prints that are meticulously staged to create humor and awareness. School was never a priority nor an interest until I enrolled in film school, which was the beginning of my journey. I instantly found my voice, passion and vision to express my views for the world to see. After writing, directing and editing a few short films which were well received with praise and accolades, I realized I wanted to challenge myself and create “mises en scenes” with a single frame.

© Davide Luciano

My work has been exhibited in solo and group shows across Canada and the United States in cities such as New York, Toronto, Montréal, Washington and Kentucky. I have had the honor of winning numerous awards, including an award of excellence from Megan Fontanella, curator at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York City.

© Davide Luciano

In my most recent photographic series titled “Sheep Nation” I explore a society that is desperate for uniqueness and originality, but ultimately succumbs to “following the herd”. Behind every mask lies a personal truth, an innocence, a sense of individualism and a longing to be seen and heard.

© Davide Luciano

This large-scale photographic series includes twenty three intimate and introspective portraits of “sheeple” and six mises en scène depicting people unable to stand alone and be unique. The subjects have allowed the influences of different forms of media to undermine their own identity and wander mindlessly in herds, like sheep.

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Links

Website: www.davideluciano.com , www.mypotholes.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/davidelucianoartist
Twitter: https://twitter.com/#!/davide_luciano

Photo Profile: Miss Aniela

I pour my mind into everything I create, and always aim to push the envelope with consistently compelling imagery with the highest production value possible, whether I’m shooting with huge budget or with just my own body and a remote trigger. Photography is always my ‘living’ whether I am working on personal or commercial work, because it is creating that keeps me feeling alive.

I am a photographer based in London, UK. I produce work primarily as an artist, but also for fashion and commercial projects. I am internationally exhibited and the author of 2 books. I also run an event called the Fashion Shoot Experience.

© Miss Aniela

My series ‘Ecology’ is about our world, and the place of humanity within it, at once a beautiful and polluting form. The images play with growth and disruption of growth, with ‘utopia’ and its opposite: dystopia. In this series I want to stir people to question and to think, intelligibly – about the problems, the beauty, and the conflict between them, in the world around us. The images are an evolution of my playful self-portraiture from 2006-2009; it is a way to express a troubled outlook on the world, through quietly sinister and even unnerving distortions.

© Miss Aniela

‘The Fourth Soil’ was created in the forest near where I live, helped by my partner Matthew who took the shots of me standing at a distance between the trees. I knew at the time that the images would be black and white, but they took on a surreal organic life force of their own to make the final image. To me, the image represents re-discovering our connection to and almost complete dependence on nature, which has been muddied and often even dismissed, like a ‘tall story’, by the attitudes of modern medicine and lifestyle.

In my ‘Surreal Fashion’ series, fashion portraits become immersed into fine- art surrealism. I make bizarre interactions between models and other elements such as paintings, drawings and objects that are found in the location in which the model was shot. The surroundings of the model echo, distort and appear in unexpected ways in each situation. This is my attempt as a fine-art photographer at making fashion shoot situations more artistic, imaginative, and thought- provoking, and to take the easily-mimicked ‘in camera’ fashion shot several innovative stages further.

© Miss Aniela

‘Storm Door’ was created during an event at Weston Park in the UK, with models dressed in semi-Regency period costume. The image of the model was shot with just the light from the modelling lamp, and stitched panoramically from two shots. During the event I had gazed at the paintings around this stately home, inspired by them more than anything else. I had photographed a classical painting of ships on the wall, fascinated by the drama in the ocean, and the tungsten hue which permeates a lot of my work. In post-production, I spontaneously combined my photograph of the model with the shot I’d taken of the sea painting. I saw that the dress could be manipulated to flow out into the waves as though the sailors were being thrashed upon it, by Mother Nature or a Helen of Troy-like figure, biting a string of pearls that fit the nautical imagery. I was also inspired by the C.S. Lewis story ‘The Voyage of the Dawn Treader’, with the fitting notion of a painting coming to life, through a door.

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Links

Facebook: www.facebook.com/missanielaphotography
Website: www.missaniela.com
Twitter: www.twitter.com/missaniela
Flickr: www.flickr.com/ndybisz

31 Images of Reflection

Rain, mirrors, lakes… a face contemplating life… We asked our Flickr followers to post an image they interpreted to illustrate ‘Reflection’.

If you want to comment on an individual photograph click on an image to be taken to it directly on Flickr. We all appreciate the feedback. You can find out more about our flickr group here.

1. Becky
Reflection

2. Dan Bailey Photo
Reflection of a Beaver

3. Lens Artwork
Reflections

4. paul downing
Reflections

5. Rina B.
Reflection

6. jezconk
Harvester Reflection

7. LeftyRodriguez
Reflections in Vegas

8. Stephen A. Wolfe
Sycamore Reflection

9. misund007
Reflections of Bedford

10. DaveFrost

11. sena10
D'une autre planète

12. Greg Schmigel
double time

13. Greg Schmigel
the bicyclist

14. klwalton
Solitary

15. Shamrockah

16. 50mm_Streettog
Walk Steady

17. pratiphotography

18. tobyct
Tree Reflection

19. ~~Lou~~

20. OKCorralPhoto
Ripples

21. theblackstar
The Great Below, London

22. shoeless LindaB (HEMEEE)
London Bridge at Sunrise

23. Tim Green aka atoach
Chain Locker

24. [ f_stopper ]
CNV00055.jpg

25. mr._martini
the kids inside

26. fomu
tram window

27. Colin Gallagher
'shhh, it's just the stars.' #3

28. dthomasd
Reflection

29. Abhinav Singhai
Reflections

30. The Neepster
suburban cyclist

31. adamjefferyphotography
Anyone can take part in our monthly Flickr themes! Check out our previous themes and find out more: 7×5 Flickr group page.

How To Stop Worrying And Start Loving Your Photography Gear

Whenever I look at a great picture in a magazine or in a gallery or even on the web, almost instantly there’s a voice in my head that says, “I should try that. It looks so good. I’m inspired.”

99% of the times there’s a much louder voice that checks me and says, “Only if I had the proper gear and the access to a studio and props and models and lenses and camera…”. The list goes on.

If you have experienced the scenario mentioned above or any of its variants, you should read further.

One of the biggest photography related hurdle I have experienced apart from ‘Photographer’s Block’ was the inability to love my gear. To come to terms with the fact that whatever lenses and camera I have are great. To accept them wholeheartedly and love every moment I spent with them. The need and inaccessibility of newer gear leads to a dissatisfaction with your present equipment.

Most of us are crippled by the thought of technologically advanced sensors and bigger and better camera and faster lenses. Ask yourself – Is my current gear really making me lag in the wonderfully adventurous and exciting photographic journey I once undertook?

Here are some of the things I did (and you should too) to overcome this hatred (if you may) of the gear I have:

1. Learn What You Have
I think it has been emphasized enough everywhere but I’m going to say it again – Read the manual. It’s the best piece of documentation you have on your camera. If you haven’t read your camera manual yet, do it and you’ll be amazed at what you can learn from it. There must be about 50 functions you don’t know about your camera yet. What does that little button next to the pop-up flash do? What’s that symbol on the display? How do I lock the focus on the subject? There’s just one answer – Read the manual.

Knowing your camera is like knowing a person. Once you know you are close and know them inside out, it’s hard keeping yourself from loving them.

2. Do-It-Yourselves and Make your own gear
Don’t have access to a studio? No problem. Make your own home studio with some white sheets and lights. Don’t have an external flash to light your portraits? No problem. Flash Lights galore!

There are many DIY websites that help you design many photography accessories yourself for cheap (external flashes, lightboxes, backgrounds – you name it!) It’s fun to make anything new and you’ll be surprised what your current gear has to offer you and how you can enhance it by just some simple DIYs. They’ll make you love your camera more and open up new genres of photography too.

The motto here is to make your own gear. You can. I did.

3. Look At Your Shutter Count
Have you used your camera enough? Are you sure you’ve exhausted and taken the most out of the kit lens before you go for that prime? In most cases it turns out we haven’t even used the current lenses and camera to their maximum potential. Check the shutter count of your camera. If you find it too low (say less than 15K), then you haven’t really used it enough and chances are you won’t be using your updated gear either.

Have you shot light trails or tried light painting? How about self-portraits? Abstracts? HDRs?

Get out with your camera and start clicking.

© Anant Nath Sharma (the Lensor)

Light Paintings are a fun way to explore and learn your camera funtions.

EXIF Data: Camera: Nikon D3000;Exposure:30;Aperture: f/11.0;Focal Length:18 mm;ISO Speed:100;Exposure Bias:0 EV;Flash:No Flash
 

4. Substitution
So, you’ve heard the 50mm prime lens is the best for street photography and portraits. Most of the street-photographers out there shoot at 50mm on f/4 and since you don’t have it you want to buy it so you can start off with your street photography. So how does the 18-105 that came with my camera body help me here? Simply put, you can use substitution. Just adjust to 50mm and there is a fair chance you can easily get somewhere close to f/4 – f/5. You can shoot excellent portraits with the kit lens.

You want to give Macro photography a go. But macro lenses cost a lot. And you’re not even sure if you’ll like that genre of photography and don’t want to invest money in the lens. Thankfully, we have the internet which is full of ways to help you out. Check out Diopters/Reverse Mounts/ Extension tubes and see if Macro is for you. There are many products available which can fulfill these special needs and are easier on the pocket.

© Anant Nath Sharma (the Lensor)

This picture was taken using a pair of Diopters (Macro filters in popular internet language)

EXIF Data: Camera :Nikon D3000; Exposure: 13; Aperture: f/22.0; Focal Length: 60 mm; ISO Speed: 100; Exposure Bias: +2/3 EV; Flash: No Flash

The idea is not to stop but look for things that might stand in for real gear.

5. Google Your Gear
Most of the time, we find ourselves incapacitated not by our gear but by lack of ideas. The internet comes in handy here. Most of the websites (including Flickr) offer a search filtered on the basis of your camera model and lens. Search your camera/lens and you see what can be accomplished using your gear. Even a simple Google search of “<Camera Model> + sample images” returns a huge amount of images you can work on. Now you can’t tell yourself you have used your gear. Try to take pictures like these and then better their quality.

As I said before, there’s so much to explore yet and you can’t really hate what you don’t know.

6. Join a community group with the same gear or interests.

Join a community group on Flickr or any other website that concerns your camera or lens(es). This would open you up with people using the same set of equipment and taking breathtaking pictures. There are DIY groups that post tutorials regularly and answer queries. Be socially active. Ask them for any tips they have. Join a discussion. Learn and grow.

7. Read EXIF
Flickr allows a photographer to share his EXIF values with the viewers. That’s one of the best things about Flickr. Now that you have searched an image with your camera model try reading these values. You’ll get a fairly good idea how a certain picture was taken. This would not only make you content with your gear, it will also improve your photography.

Note: Some of the photographers are not that generous and don’t share EXIFs. Don’t lose heart; there are plenty of photographers that do (including me).

8. Learn Post-Processing

When I started photography, the web disheartened me. There were so many pictures that were so much better than mine. Pictures of everyday objects, with nice popping colours and
brilliant contrasts, deep blacks and tints. I was crestfallen. Why can’t I make that soda can look that pretty even though I did everything by the book? I got my answer after I spent a little time browsing through these pictures. PHOTOSHOP. Now I’m not talking about photo manipulation. That’s a totally different area. Learn the basics. Adjust contrasts and exposure. Play around with saturations and highlights and shadows. These are things that you can’t usually achieve in camera (OK! OK! You can but that’s discussion for another day). You’ll be surprised beyond imagination what 2 minutes in Photoshop (or any other post-processing software. GIMP? Anyone?) can do to your pictures. If your camera supports exposure bracketing (read the manual my friend) why not give HDR a go?

© Anant Nath Sharma (the Lensor)

An example of what a little time spent in post-processing can do to an otherwise bland image. Total time spent in Lightroom : < 3 minutes. Parameters adjusted: Contrasts, shadows, highlights and saturation.

I’m sure if you think and implement what I have said in this article, you’ll not only enjoy your photography equipment more, you’ll also improve a lot. The idea here is to learn and enjoy your camera with all its shortcomings (if you still want to believe they are shortcomings). Just keep clicking and learning. And when you can take mind-blowing pictures with your present equipment at all times; when you can use your camera like a Samurai uses his sword (sorry for the lame analogy but you know what I mean); and when you want to exceed that – you’ll know when the time is right for an upgrade. So until then, love what you have and enjoy.

I am adding a little description of the camera and lenses I use. Be the judge yourself of how important gear is:

  • Nikon D3000 (I have read reviews calling it the worst DSLR Nikon ever came up with; I made faces when I read that and didn’t pick up my camera for a week.)
  • Nikkor 50mm f/1.8D (Doesn’t autofocus on my camera body; I used to cry about that.)
  • Nikkor 18.0-55.0 mm f/3.5-5.6 (The DX Model; No Vibration Reduction)
  • 55.0-200.0 mm f/4.0-5.6 (The DX Model; No Vibration Reduction)

Never stop clicking!

Anant. (The Lensor)
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Anant Nath Sharma, a 26 year old self-taught photographer based out of Pune, India.  Currently pursuing street and fashion photography; taking pictures that tell stories and enjoying every moment of it.

Blog: www.thelensor.tumblr.com

Photo Profile: Fokko Muller

Began photography in Sept. 2009, started street photography in 2010. Since then I don’t do anything else but street.

I would like to show two pictures of mine that will tell you something about how I look into the world of street photography.

© Fokko Muller

This is my favorite street photo so far. Why?
-       it tells a story, it makes you think what is going on there.
-       it is a daily scene you can see in any street: people crossing a street.
-       It shows people in their daily environment and you can see (part of) the environment
-       it is not posed or staged.
-       it is shot close to the subject.
-       it has a composition that is ok.
-       the shutter was released at the right moment.
-       humor is involved, not necessary but a pleasant most of the times.

I was at the right place, at the right time and released the shutter at exactly the right moment.
Lucky shot? Yes and no.
Yes: I was lucky they crossed the street at that moment and that they all ‘acted’ like they did.
No: I have an eye for these situations and I take the picture at the right moment.

But to be honest, I have missed a lot of beautiful moments on the street because I was a second too late.

In my opinion it is a special photo, it has something magic for me. That will separate a good street photo from the average ones.

©Fokko Muller

I can repeat the remarks that I made by the first photo, but I won’t. I am really very happy that the old man decided to get in my frame.
The reason I show this picture is that street photography can be fine in color too. Black and white is used often and it has the advantage that it will keep you focused on the subjects. But if color adds something to the picture, I use it.

Street photography is fun. The streets are changing every second. I have to be alert and focused. It is very exciting to take photos of people without them knowing I do this. I can do it 24/7, every day of the week. I don’t need a big city; my small home town will do fine. Big cities are special, because they will happen more in a square kilometer. Gear is not very important, fast autofocus is what I need. I use what I have, even my iPhone is ok. I use only lenses with fixed focal length like my Canon 28mm.

After some street walk I like to share my photos and look at photos of other street photographers. The internet is fabulous, I have contact with street photographers from all over the word on every continent.

If you have any questions or remarks, don’t hesitate to contact me.

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Links

Website: www.fokkomuller.nl
Blog: http://fokkomuller.wordpress.com/
Flickr: http://www.flickr.com/photos/fokkomuller/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/fokkomuller
Twitter: https://twitter.com/fomu