Beyond Shutter Speed

by justin on November 25, 2008

in Learn,Photographers

I remember trying to photograph my friend Christian about one year after I got my first camera. I moved slow, making sure that little needle inside (light meter) was lined up just right. Check the shutter speed. Ok. Got it. Check the aperture. Ok. It’s where it needs to be. Then focus. By that time, Christian had got up and walked away. Christian’s cousin, Trent Nelson, is photojournalist and so Chris was used to that kind of photographer. Moving quickly, making a record of things as they unfold.

Sometimes making a picture is like hitting a fast ball. The first time you play baseball, you don’t have to try and hit a pitch that’s coming at you at 100 mph. Instead, you first hit off a T. Then you try hitting and underhand pitch. And with enough practice and some time later, you’re knocking it out of the park at any speed.

So now I’m a wedding photographer and things move pretty quickly. It helps to get to the point in making pictures where the camera is just an extension of your brain. That what you see, can, in an instant, be recorded for the history books (aka – the wedding album). At that point, fiddling with shutter speed and camera dials means the bride is already down the isle and you missed the kiss.

But anyone can master that part of photography in a relatively short amount of time and then the question is why some pictures are more successful than others. Making pictures that truly sing, pictures that move people to tears, pictures with soul, require more that just a properly exposed image. Yesterday, on his blog, David Alan Harvey, one of the world’s great photographers wrote about the importance of connection to the subject here. You’ll draw your own conclusions, but for me, I read that blog post and think that it’s hard to make a good photograph of another person if you don’t or can’t make a connection with that person in some way. That’s a skill seperate from making pictures, but a skill the good pictures can’t do without.

{ 5 comments }

Mrs. Olsen November 26, 2008 at 1:51 am

You have always been good at that Justin, plus as a bonus, you’re funny.

Nicole March November 28, 2008 at 1:45 pm

You are such an inspiration! As I’m trying to learn photography myself I’m at that overwhelming stage where I want my photographs to look as good as a professional like you and I just have to remember, baby steps, keep going, practice. But it’s nice to know that even a photographer as great as you also started out at a slow pace and worked your way up, it gives me hope. I’ll get there some day!

justin November 28, 2008 at 2:42 pm

Hi Nicole. You will get there some day, and sooner than you think, too. Are you coming to the party? I sent you an email invitation. We hope to see you and Jordan next Friday!

Alisa December 3, 2008 at 4:07 pm

Before I met you, Abby told me that you are good at what you do because you pretend like you’re invisible and end up in the right place so much of the time.

And yet, while being invisible, you are also somehow making the connection. Having seen you in action many times, people are compelled to let you see something for that second or series of seconds, so it’s almost like you have an invisibility cloak that you whip on and off. Enviable.

I so wish I could come to the party!

justin December 3, 2008 at 4:52 pm

Alisa, thanks so much. That’s kind of you to say.

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