Always On the Outside, Looking In?
All creatures great and small succumb to a universal truth: We don’t want to be kept out.
All creatures great and small succumb to a universal truth: We don’t want to be kept out.
Where’s there a sunset party every night where the sky-gazing and the people-watching compete?
You use your iPhone for listening every day, but have you ever used its camera to really listen?
What’s leftover after the pretty people have gone? A Wordless Wednesday response without words.
How do you like to shoot tequila? Try it blanco or añejo, with lime or with salt, and add Snapseed for a finishing touch.
Curiosity can shift your attitude so that you’re seeing magic in what’s been seemingly mundane, and your creativity will skyrocket.
Photographers, like painters, present their vision of what they see to the world. Like painters, they’re artists. Talk with them about their art the same way.
When you’re in a car, itching to shoot what’s flashing by, but there’s a window and 75 mph between you and your fast-moving subjects, you can still shoot the scenery with these pro tips.
The impulse to distraction will always be with us. But to find focus, we can look within, where our own best experts live.
Sometimes themes emerge and merge; this week, letters and cursive and sketching had the upper hand. Pick and choose from the stories in the crosswinds.
For inspiration, all you need is patience to see what remains.
The marketplace is so crowded with content and platforms for sharing and communicating. Choice is a powerful thing. But it can leave little space for the creative ideas that are waiting to bubble up.
Look up. You can retrain your eyes to shoot above and beyond and indulge in some sky writing.
Did your (very) human eye see the scene you photographed and post-processed the way your HDR image looks? Not likely.
Get your tech affairs together so you have more time for creativity in 2014. It’s nearly 2014. The year will begin with experts’ columns, advising us on New Year preparations, resolutions […]