Inside and out.
(please click on the image to view)
↑Leica M9 and Konica Hexanon 60mm f/1.2.
If you’re “just” photographing your family, get the BEST photo equipment you can afford (that you are able to use, or can learn to use).
— Peter | Prosophos.
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I was prompted to write the above after reading yet another, “if you’re just photographing your family, get a cheap point-and-shoot” comment on one of the internet forums. It always leaves me shaking my head when I come across that sort of statement, not because I have anything against inexpensive cameras (which I’ve used and continue to use, and which can be used to take wonderful photos), but because of the implication behind the words, that – for whatever reason – your family is not worthy of the best* equipment.
Nonsense.
Documenting your family’s timeline – the various trials and tribulations, the tears, the joy, the exciting, the mundane, the… the anything – is one of the most important things you can do with a camera. The snobbery around exclusively using “pro” equipment (whatever that is) to photograph athletes, celebrities, or otherwise “important” individuals is laughable. As if most of us are able to remember more than a handful of “pro” magazine cover images we’ve ever seen…
Instead, it’s all those images reminding us of the births, marriages, and deaths of our loved ones, that burn themselves into our brains.
—Peter.
[Note: I also posted this on SteveHuffPhoto.com]
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*Note: best does not necessarily equate with biggest.
Game face on.
The original G – A portrait can be found here.
(please click on the image to view)
↑Leica M9 and Leica 35mm Summilux ASPH FLE @ f/1.4.
The law wasn’t broken here, but a rule was.
A shallow depth of field was used to unconventionally blur the foreground figure (policewoman). It’s an unconventional choice because your mind normally expects the most foreground elements to be in focus. Violating this “rule” can prove for a distracting image, but I believe it works here because of the particular composition and because the two officers are mirroring each other with their expressions.
(please click on the image to view)
↑Leica M9 and Konica Hexanon 60mm @ f/1.2.
My 11 favourite images from 2011, with a couple of bonus images included.
—Peter.
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Please show your appreciation!
If you’ve been inspired by these images, or any of my articles, please consider making a contribution to help me run this site. Whether it’s $5, $10, or $15… it all helps.
This site is a labour of love, but any help I receive will help me devote more time to running it.
Thanks,
—Peter.
According to the stats, these were the Top 5 most viewed posts of 2011:
Honourable mention goes to the post, The Konica Hexanon 60mm f/1.2, Special Edition, as a late year write-up that proved to be quite popular.
This site started as a personal project in April of 2011 and I only started posting regularly in late June. In the subsequent six months, I uploaded over 1,000 images and attached brief commentary to most of them (my feeble attempt to see beyond the images and offer some insight into the moment captured). In the same period, there were over 100,000 views from all over the world…
The truth is, I’d continue posting and writing even if nobody was watching, but it’s nice to know that I’m not operating in a vacuum 🙂
So, to those of you who have stopped by and graced the site with a comment or two, I would like to offer my sincerest gratitude and convey a heartfelt “Thank you.”
—Peter.