Eighth and Nimitz, Towers and Wall. Mare Island Naval Ship Yard, Vallejo, California. February 6, 2010. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.
Towers and brick wall at the corner of Eight and Nimitz, Mare Island Naval Ship Yard, Vallejo, California.
One more take on the corner of Nimitz Avenue and Eighth Street in the “historic core” of the Mare Island Naval Ship Yard, as photographed after dark on my recent visit with The Nocturnes, the SF Bay Area night photography group. (Visit their web site for lots of great night photography resources.)
I thought I’d post this photograph as an example of several things that I think about a lot as I make photographs and post them at my blog and elsewhere on the web. Here goes:
- While I post a number of photographs that I am very happy with, I also post quite a few that are part of the learning and development process. In fact, posting daily is part of my dedication to practice, an idea that I learned from many years in music. Daily work with images – whether making photographs or working on photographs already made or thinking about how I might photograph subjects I encounter or looking at the photographs of others – sharpens my visual acuity and improves my ability to “see” photographs in subjects I encounter. This is one of those not-quite-right photographs that I learn from.
- There is much that I like in this photograph, but there is also a significant compositional issue that I recognized as soon as I looked at it on the computer. See it yet? I’ll wait…
- With a moment to look more closely you probably noticed some issues with the placement of the nearest steel beam on the right side of the frame. It almost, but not quite, covers one of the window frames in the brick wall in the background, but unfortunately a bit of that frame sticks out beyond the left side of the beam. In addition, and related to that, the right side of this beam partially blocks the upper right edge of one of the windows.
- Of course, now that I’m sitting at my computer in a warm and well-lit room, I can easily see how I could have solved this problem when I made the exposure – most likely by moving a bit to the right and perhaps slightly forward. With that in mind, I’ve filed two things in the “photographic memory bank.” First, the next time I shoot this scene I’ll probably resolve this issue! Second, I’ve added one more data point to the experience that I draw on when I make a shot, and this increases the chances that I won’t miss things like this quite so often in the future.
Live and learn! :-)
This photograph is not in the public domain and may not be used on websites, blogs, or in other media without advance permission from G Dan Mitchell.
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Ernie and Cynthia, thanks for stopping by and commenting.
It is easy to overlook these things if you aren’t paying attention – and I wish that I would always pay enough attention! Not sure what happened with this one, since the issues (especially the window to the right of the beam) are pretty clear and the sort of thing I usually check for, especially when working from the tripod as I was on this night.
I’m not going to pretend that I have all the answers to this one, but I think there are a few things you can do. For one, it is always good, I think, to look along the borders of any space or object in the frame and think about what appears on those borders – and whether or not you want it crossing these borders. It is also good to step away from the camera if you have time and just look at the scene as it is. Often this helps you see things different from – and sometimes more clearly than – when you view through the camera.
Dan
This was an interesting post. I don’t know how much I miss things like that but now I can pay more attention to this composition item.
Sometimes when I have something like this, I use Photoshop to clone over the area I don’t like. Then I can see how it should have looked. I think that might be able to done for the left side, but not the right side. Most of the time I don’t keep a photo that needs that, but it does help me see how to do it better.
Great post and analysis Dan! I stop by your blog every day to see what’s up and don’t always have time to comment. But I had a moment this morning and have to say that you nailed what’s wrong with most of my photographs. I have compositional issues in my pictures because I am missing little things like you discussed here. I can often see the problems when I get home and look at the pictures on the computer. When I am out in the field though, its a different story. I think I get so excited taking the pictures that I forget to fully think about the art of what I’m trying to do. And so I end up with mergers and badly placed subjects or subjects cutoff on the sides and I wonder why I didn’t move a little while I was there. I need to spend more time looking through the view finder thinking about these things and perhaps a little less time clicking! Maybe I need a mantra, “Think before I click!”