Why 'Environmental' photography?
Because, with a camera we can explore our environment, wherever and whatever that may be - city, village, industrial sprawl, mountain, forest, sea...
If I say 'Landscape' photography, there are often a set of habits, pictures and assumptions that automatically spring to mind, and you might want to look beyond the scenery.
What we will be doing on the course depends very much on what you want to get out of it - so do let me know. (I have a few ideas of my own, of course.)
I have found that most people like to spend as much time actually out and about, shooting. I use this blog to introduce ideas and show some styles of photography that will be helpful when we are out shooting; and I also use it to keep you informed of meeting arrangements and locations.
I can also be contacted at kbrame@blueyonder.co.uk
My background is in professional editorial and corporate photography, and I have produced landscape photography of some of the wilder parts of Scotland for the land conservation charity, the John Muir Trust.
You can find a examples of that project at:
http://pa.photoshelter.com/c/brame
and
www.keith-brame.com
and http://kbrame.blogspot.com - I try to update this blog and I plan to develop it as a photographic education site, so it might be worth keeping an eye on...
The basic set of considerations for any day out shooting is this:
- The location
- The conditions
- The idea
- The inspiration
- The route
Met office pressure chart - north airflow often means good light |
- The location is Stills and the Old Town
- The conditions will be (probably) cool, with clouds clearing, and when they do so we may get clear, undiffused, contrasty light. We have the beginning of a northerly air flow that often gives lovely clear light and varied cloudscapes. I think today it may be modified by a little hazy cloud. Towards the end of the afternoon, that light will be low angled, oblique and useful for revealing texture and form. In autumn, winter and early spring, such light also shoots through wynds like a dramatic spotlight.
Ragnar Axelsson - using frames to good effect |
- The idea may be a simple visual one or something with a bit more conceptual content. The visual idea may flow from the conditions - so today we could explore the visual idea of high contrast light, and explore the extremes of brightness and shade. The idea may also be a larger unifying project idea that links your shooting together to create a coherent project theme.
Josef Sudek, the poet of Prague, created a powerful body of work as a result of being constrained |
Rangnar Axelsson making bold use of the frame's edge, and also the 'acutance' or edge definition of the tones within the image |
Trent Parke "light turns to ordinary into the magical" |
- The inspiration - there's a lot of good photography out there to help us. Sometimes this can make us feel that it has all been done before. Paul Hill has remarked in his book, 'Approaching Photography', that "you haven't done it, and it is important to remember that fact." Jerome Loreau has an eye for light and contrast in his travel photographs that include Edinburgh.
Robert Reihhardt, following in Alvin Langdon Coburn's footsteps |
Weir's Close - Alvin Langdon Coburn, inspired by Romantic stories and writing, especially Robert Louis Stevenson |
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