Rainy day

Images explained - Little stories about making decisions

Rainy day

A rainy day often destroys all photography plans. On top of all the inconveniences you also need to keep your equipment dry.

Don’t give up, as there are still plenty of opportunities without getting wet.

This scene would have been just ordinary. To change it I focused on the rain drops and used a shallow depth of field. Now the rain is the subject and so there is no need to have the people sharp.

Photography is not just a matter of aiming your camera and pressing the button. For collecting memories this is perfectly alright. But if you want to decide what exactly ends up in your photo and how, you have to spend some more time and make decisions.

What is it what you want? Are there any distractions or irrelevant parts you definitely don’t want in your image? Do you want to be creative by changing your aperture or shutter speed? Or even move the camera (or just the lens) while pressing the shutter, to add a certain effect? What is the best moment to press the button?

This is a series of images where I explain what it is what I wanted and how I executed my plans.

These are things I talk about on my photography tours. If this appeal to you, check out the tours or go straight to www.photo-voyager.com to make your booking.

Morning in the alleys

Patience

Images explained - Little stories about making decisions

Patience

There used to be a very photogenic wall in an alley in Hoi An, until the house was destroyed a few years ago. In the early morning hours there were some shadows and with a little bit of imagination I started seeing many triangles. I just had to frame it precisely.

Just the triangles would not be enough. There was a big empty space in the centre and I wanted to fill it with another triangle. I waited for any conical hat woman and when she passed by I pressed the button. Sometimes you gotta wait to make something happen. Patience is a virtue.

Photography is not just a matter of aiming your camera and pressing the button. For collecting memories this is perfectly alright. But if you want to decide what exactly ends up in your photo and how, you have to spend some more time and make decisions.

What is it what you want? Are there any distractions or irrelevant parts you definitely don’t want in your image? Do you want to be creative by changing your aperture or shutter speed? Or even move the camera (or just the lens) while pressing the shutter, to add a certain effect? What is the best moment to press the button?

This is a series of images where I explain what it is what I wanted and how I executed my plans.

These are things I talk about on my photography tours. If this appeal to you, check out the tours or go straight to www.photo-voyager.com to make your booking.

Luck

Images explained - Little stories about making decisions

Luck

Hanoi 2009 on the shores of Hoan Kiem lake. In this photo a few necessities come together. The two guys had potential, but what to do with the rest of the image? I considered getting closer with my 50mm lens and then I decided to include the traffic and create some kind of movement. So, a slower shutter speed. The problem was that I did not have a tripod with me and the two subjects could potentially move. Despite the suicide mission I chose a quarter of a second. Such a speed is normally a disaster, but in order to get what I wanted I had no choice. And I got more than I could anticipate. The boy makes an unexpected movement, yet he is still frozen in time. Sometimes you need a little bit of luck.

Photography is not just a matter of aiming your camera and pressing the button. For collecting memories this is perfectly alright. But if you want to decide what exactly ends up in your photo and how, you have to spend some more time and make decisions.

What is it what you want? Are there any distractions or irrelevant parts you definitely don’t want in your image? Do you want to be creative by changing your aperture or shutter speed? Or even move the camera (or just the lens) while pressing the shutter, to add a certain effect? What is the best moment to press the button?

This is a series of images where I explain what it is what I wanted and how I executed my plans.

These are things I talk about on my photography tours. If this appeal to you, check out the tours or go straight to www.photo-voyager.com to make your booking.