San Francisco, July 2024.
How to develop your photographic taste
In order to make great photographs, we need to know what makes them great in the first place. Developing a photographic taste is crucial, both internal (our own taste) and external (the objective truths of the medium).
In this video, we dive deep into this topic and talk about how we can get better as photographers by improving our taste.
Morning commute
San Francisco, July 2024.
Cold day in the Rockies
Colorado, September 2020.
Flight, I
San Francisco, June 2024.
From the video "Trapped" in San Francisco.
De Young, I
San Francisco, June 2024.
From the video "Trapped" in San Francisco.
Sunrise in Norway
Norway, September 2022.
From the video A day of photography on the road in Norway.
Heron of Semiahmoo
Washington, October 2020.
The tree on top
San Francisco, June 2024.
From the video "Trapped" in San Francisco.
The tallest things
Yosemite National Park, California, February 2024.
From the video Chasing bad weather at Yosemite.
Golden Gate Park, I
San Francisco, June 2024.
From the video "Trapped" in San Francisco.
Orthodox Church
San Francisco, June 2024.
From the video "Trapped" in San Francisco.
Shadows of San Francisco
California, June 2024.
From the video "Trapped" in San Francisco.
"Trapped" in San Francisco
As someone who hates the heat, and being surrounded by it, I have no option but to stay in the city for the time being. Not a problem, though, as I often get amazing conditions for photography right on my doorstep.
Evergreen
Galicia, January 2024.
Full Moon over Yosemite Valley
Yosemite National Park, California, February 2024.
From the video Chasing bad weather at Yosemite.
Light through
San Francisco, May 2024.
From the video Moving to California.
Palmtown
San Francisco, May 2024.
Carrelet, I
France, December 2022.
From the video Long exposure photography paradise in Pornic, France.
Practice doesn’t make perfect, and that’s why you should practice even more
I am a huge advocate of daily photography. I try to take photographs wherever I am, whatever I’m doing. One reason is that there’s always an image waiting to be made, but also because I believe the more we do it, the better we get at it.
Surely, blind practice can be detrimental in deterministic scenarios, like basketball: sticking to a bad shooting technique when you are missing all your shots can make you a worse player in the long run. Practice doesn’t always make perfect without feedback and corrections.
But what does “perfect” even mean in photography as an art?
When we take photographs often, we become more familiar with our camera, our process, dealing with different subjects and lighting conditions, and post-processing.
More importantly, spending a bit of time every day paying attention to our surroundings, looking for something worthwhile to capture, can only make us better observers.
And above all, mistakes are not to be avoided in photography. Experimentation is fundamental to growing as an artist, even if it doesn’t seem like it at first.
There’s never been perfection in art, and there will never be.