Achieving simplicity in photography is a very difficult, but worthwhile goal.
Simple compositions are generally more pleasing to the eye, and more directly communicate visual impressions than cluttered ones.
In the first image below, the triad of leaves, lit up by an errant shaft of sunlight, first caught my attention as I was walking by so I appropriately exposed for them. Exposing for their brilliant glow meant losing details in the shadows, but this is what I wanted, as the end-effect is a seemingly floating cluster of foliage with only the mere suggestion of the supporting framework of trees.
Simplicity.
(please click on the image below)
↑Leica M9 and Leica 50mm Summicron @ f/2.
Most novice photographers make the error of being over-inclusive in their images and forget to ask themselves, what is it about this scene that first caught my attention?
Often we can easily achieve simplicity by shooting with a telephoto lens or by moving closer and isolating the subject of interest. But this is not the only way.
More tricky – and more satisfying – is to capture a wider scene that has been stripped down to just a few elements. Sometimes that’s impossible, especially in a world all too cluttered with distractions. But it’s worth trying for.
In the second image below, the original scene was full of foreground objects, but I moved myself to higher ground and angled my field of view so that only two things (besides the sky) are visible in the final image.
(please click on the image below)
↑Leica M8 and Leica 50mm Summilux ASPH @ f/1.4.
In photography then, truly, less is more.



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