This week BPSOP instructor Joe Baraban reminds us to ask yourself an important question.
Did it do it?
One of the things I like to tell photographers to ask themselves is, “Did It Do It?” I pass this on as soon as I can to my students so they can get a handle on it and start incorporating it into their thought process. Ask yourself, “Did it do what you intended”.
If I took a census of all the frequently made mistakes that beginning photographers make, a few quickly come to mind. One of them is when the student explains to me what they were trying to achieve in their photo that is clearly esoteric. Sometimes it’s so esoteric that only the student/photographer themselves gets it.
Now that’s really esoteric!!!
Whatever message you’re trying to send out (in a photograph) has to be able to stand on it’s own. I explain to my students that they won’t always be around to describe their thinking and make that idea clear, so unless it’s an obvious abstraction of reality where it’s best if the student lets the viewer decide what they think it is, the photo should be a “quick read”.
If you intended for the man that’s standing on a rock overlooking the ocean to be in deep thought, make it so his body language conveys that thought. Where you place him in the composition is so important. Putting him in the bottom right corner says something entirely different than placing him in the middle of the frame. Put yourself in the viewer’s place and think whether you would get the message. Right before you click the shutter “consider the scene, and its eventual outcome”.