glad someone finally said this.

ann

On 4/20/2023 9:11 PM, Stan Halpin wrote:
You say “not the same thing…”. Why not?  Just for discussion…

I sat through an on-line workshop yesterday afternoon, Tim Grey on How to Plan 
for a Trip. His base example was Rome, whether talking about useful weather 
apps or packing tips or day-by-day route planning. But where/what to 
photograph? One approach he suggested was to start with google images. He found 
about 1.5 million images (Google or Twitter, I lost track) which pretty well 
summed up places and viewpoints in that city.

I was reminded of a few years ago, in Venice, with Gianfranco. He chided me for 
the photo I was setting up for, an evening shot of the Grand Canal, gondolas in 
the foreground, the bends in the canal, Sun on the buildings in the distance. 
Too cliche, too much like a postcard? Yes, he had a point. But. No one else had 
ever seen that scene nor would anyone ever seen that scene again. Similar, 
sure. But my image was uniquely what I was seeing at that point in time. And if 
others had had a similar experience, good on them. But I was pleased to see 
what I saw and to be able to capture it.
Yes, we explored and found different viewpoints and different scenes, but their 
uniqueness didn’t make them better or worse. One fun experience:  Meg was 
starting to take a photo of a women on a third floor balcony, hanging her 
laundry. The lady objected. We backed off, didn’t point cameras at her. But we 
did start taking pictures of her reflection in a nearby puddle! Once we started 
away, it was fun to see how many people stopped to look into that puddle, 
trying to see why we had been so intently studying it.

In short, unless you are shooting for stock photos and don’t want to have your 
images lost in the crowd, just shoot what pleases you. And then step aside 
because 27 others want to capture that same view, and that’s ok.

Stan

Sent from my iPad

On Apr 19, 2023, at 9:59 AM, coll...@brendemuehl.net wrote:

In Sept we’re going to Yellowstone for 1 week followed by the Grand Canyon for 
another week.

At least with digital I don’t have to worry about running out of film. (Just 
battery life.) Except for the 6x7. At 10 shots per roll one must be judicious.

So the question is: What should I shoot? Not just the same things that a 
million other tourists have shot, that’s for certain.
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