Open-Minded Illumination

If the conditions prevent you from taking great images, dig a bit deeper into your creativity to come away with winnersOpen-Minded Illumination

Words of wisdom come from places you least expect to hear them. Not in my wildest dreams did I think I’d be enlightened by a total stranger seated next to me at the airport. His words were something to the effect of, “My initial flight was canceled, my aisle seat was changed to a middle one, the weather delay is messing with my mind and the kid behind me on my first flight kept kicking my seat, but a bad two days of air travel is still better than two days at work when your destination is where you’ve dreamed about going all your life.” 

As I reflected upon his words while watching a family of eight kids run havoc around the gate area, the guy’s perceptive quips left a deep impression. I’ve accumulated my fair share of air miles and endured similar circumstances to those shared by my seatmate but never viewed how wonderful it is to zero in on only the positive aspects of the location to where I was headed. This got me thinking—I immediately called to mind all my “bad” photographic days and realized how great it was to still have been outdoors making pictures.

Open-Minded Illumination

It’s always a pleasure to go away. The definition isn’t limited to a time span. One can go away from their home for just half a day on a short photo excursion. Regardless of the timeline, to have the opportunity to be outdoors on a photo adventure—be it a day trip, weekend or entire vacation—is an adrenaline-pumping experience.

The days of beautiful light, cooperative wildlife and phenomenal conditions always produce euphoria—this goes without saying. But what about the days where the light cooperates but no wildlife shows up? What about the days where the wildlife is out but where they choose to be leaves you unmotivated to press the shutter? What about the days when both the light and wildlife don’t cooperate? What the heck—make lemonade! Feel the wind on your face, shake the morning dew off your boots, inhale the scent of sea air, layer up with a windbreaker and wear a smile on your face. You’re still out in nature, you’re in your environment, and it’s good to be alive.

Open-Minded Illumination

As with each of you who got this far into this week’s Tip of the Week, my goal is to return from each outing with as many great images as possible. But, if the conditions prevent this outcome, I enjoy the positive aspect of how my photography lead me on the outing in the first place.

So, the next time a day trip, weekend or even an entire week is a photographic bust, appreciate the fact that your love of photography got you outdoors doing something you enjoy so much. More importantly, stay positive regarding your photography.

Open-Minded Illumination

Keep your “photo eyes” open and learn to open them a bit wider when the conditions aren’t desirable. Don’t get discouraged as your photos will reflect your attitude. Dig a bit deeper into your creativity to come away with a winner. Try a new technique that’s been on the back burner. Zoom the lens, try some pan blurs, break out the flash, slow down the shutter, raise the ISO or combine any of the above. You may have to work a bit harder, but then again, whoever said making a great photo is easy?

Visit http://www.russburdenphotography.com for information about his nature photography tours and safari to Tanzania.

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Why Instagram Should Hide Follower Counts and Why It Never Will

Why Instagram Should Hide Follower Counts and Why It Never Will

Instagram appears to be in the process of rolling out a surprising change to its platform: hiding the number of times that a post has been liked. While the internet giant claims that it’s making the change in to help us focus on the thing we love, the truth is different. If it really wants to improve things, it should go one step further and hide follower counts too. You can be sure, however, that it never will.

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How to Take Unique Travel Photos That Sell on Stock

Unique Travel Photos: Man and Woman Running in Desert

Try these simple tips for capturing one-of-a-kind travel photos that are a perfect fit for stock, no matter where you are in the world.

The post How to Take Unique Travel Photos That Sell on Stock appeared first on The Shutterstock Blog.

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Golden Hour Photography: How to Work with Light and Shadows

Golden Hour Photography: How to Work with Light and Shadows

From lenses, to reflectors, here are a few different things to consider before heading out for your next golden hour shoot.

The post Golden Hour Photography: How to Work with Light and Shadows appeared first on The Shutterstock Blog.

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So You Want to Make a Movie? How Are You Going to Pay For That?

So You Want to Make a Movie? How Are You Going to Pay For That?

In an industry dominated by budgets in the millions, or even hundreds of millions, how can an independent filmmaker get their vision to market? YouTube, VIMEO, luck? The festival circuit? Making a movie is expensive, so how does a rising artist find enough financial support to break into the business of film?

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12 Tips to Master Long Exposure Landscape Photography

Long Exposure in Landscape Photography: Blurred Ocean

Discover these twelve simple but effective tricks from the pros and master the art of shooting long exposure landscape photography.

The post 12 Tips to Master Long Exposure Landscape Photography appeared first on The Shutterstock Blog.

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10 Of Our Most Popular How-To Articles For World Photography Day

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How Robert Ascroft Shot This Series of Milk Images with Celebrity Angela Serafyan of HBO’s Westworld

How Robert Ascroft Shot This Series of Milk Images with Celebrity Angela Serafyan of HBO’s Westworld

Robert Ascroft is known worldwide for his celebrity, sports, and fashion photographs. His client list includes Warner Bros, 20th Century Fox, Showtime, A&E, Puma, Vanity Fair, and Rolex. So, basically his client list includes some of the biggest names in his industries of focus! Not bad, right? Go big or go home I guess!

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Fstoppers Reviews the NBP Freqsep Control 2.1 Plugin Update

Fstoppers Reviews the NBP Freqsep Control 2.1 Plugin Update

As always, I get comfortable in my workflow then something new comes along that I didn’t know I needed. This can of course be a good thing as long as we aren’t closed minded to change. Today I’m going over an awesome new feature of the new NBP Freqsep Control update version 2.1.

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