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"Emotional Light"
This article has been updated
with "You can do better."
Photographic workshop days are physically and mentally exhausting. The hours are very long.
Mentally, you are engaged in creative exercises all day involving composition
and technical considerations with the imaging equipment. This
particular day was no different. We had engaged in a full day of
creative photography and were enjoying some friendly conversation at what
looked like could be the end of the day as clouds began to roll in. We
had a few drops of rain, some loud claps of thunder, and were treated to a
beautiful double rainbow.
As the sun fell in the west we could see a break in the cloud cover.
Few words were said as all participants prepared compositions for the
moment that might happen. I returned to an area where I had
pre-visualized the composition below and had actually taken a few
photographs for practice. On this particular workshop I was working on
my "near-to-far" compositions and technical skills associated with this type
of composition with the large format camera.
The composition was in place with film loaded and shutter release in hand.
Now to wait for the dramatic light and meter the
scene appropriately (I can go into this at another time.) Then...it
happened...the last breath of light bending through the Earth's atmosphere
and falling as red powder over the entire scene. It was exhilarating
and only lasted for two minutes, but seemed like seconds. The light
was special because we could feel the excitement, everyone was busy
photographing during this special light. Physiologically it felt as
though the starter had just shot the gun at the 100 meter dash.
Euphoria, thankfulness, anxiety, focused thought, frustration,
deliberation...all of these emotions and physiological functions were coming
together in a complexity that is hard to describe. It is in some ways
a miracle that I recorded anything accurately on film. But
preparedness and experience had paid off with good results.
Alain posted a beautiful
composition where the camera is facing the sun with the flowers in the
foreground. I was anxious as to whether or not I had captured the
moment accurately with the 8 sheets of film I had exposed. After
returning home and placing the transparencies on the light table, I had one
piece of film with the proper exposure for the flowers and shadows. The post
processing of this image is largely impacted by my current studies of
landscape painting. I will have more to say about the impact of
landscape painting on photographic visualization in future writings.
As I prepare for photographic journeys, I try to take note of the following
guidelines while in the field to increase my odds of capturing that special
"emotional light" when it happens:
1. Get familiar with the entire scene. I like to go to a
location and spend a lot of time taking in the scenery, calculating
sunrise/sunset locations, pre-visualizing photographs, and looking for
structure/lines/shapes/color.
2. If I find a composition of interest, I give the composition time to
find the right light. No matter how tired or hungry I am, I give the
composition time for what may be that "once in a lifetime" light.
3. Be prepared in advance...just in case that "emotional light" breaks
through. Plenty of film should be loaded or available with plenty of
storage for the digital photographer. Focus should be set and a rough
idea of exposure should be calculated. Whether using film or digital,
I bracket as many as 4 stops over and under in order to have information for
post-processing where dynamic range can be maximized.
Whether you use film or digital, if you are not prepared for the photograph
before that special "emotional light" takes place, odds are you won't get
the photograph you envisioned. I hope you enjoy the photograph below
and I wish you all of the best in your future photographic journeys.
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| Sunflower
pre-visualization photograph in flat overcast light just moments prior
to the photograph at right. |
The last rays
of the setting sun escape from beneath the clouds to provide dramatic
light on the scene. |
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