Happy Wednesday y'all,
I'm Alex, and you're reading Stillnotes, a photography newsletter about more than just photography. Thanks for reading.
This week I was sifting through my archive and landed on a trip to the California coast last summer. I headed to Bodega Bay to visit my sister, and my brother's family came up to join for the weekend. It was a slow, relaxing few days of playing around the yard, going to the beach, and simple meals. The yard next to my sister's place is chock full of dandelions. Each day is a cycle of grassy plants, thousands of flowering yellows, and finally the white-ish gray of the seed heads in the evening once the sun has set. One evening, my sister was playing with the dandelions and blowing their seeds into the wind. Naturally, my niece and nephews wanted to try, leading to the first image above. I was using my run and gun setup—Sony A7r3 with the tiny 35mm f/2.8 Sonnar lens.
This fun little moment suddenly turned into all out war when dandelion seeds were turned into blow darts directed at the kids. They scampered around the yard with my siblings in pursuit, dodging and returning fire. I entered the chaos as a journalist, rushing around documenting the hysteria and becoming a target myself.
On first review of the photos, it looked like a lot of bad compositions. People cut off on the sides of the frame, missed autofocus causing blurriness, and flat light. So I put them aside and didn't think anything of it. Revisiting the images this week I came across the first image and saw potential where I didn't before. Recently I've been drawn to slow shutter speeds and grainy black and white images after getting some film back from last fall that matched the look. So I cropped in aggressively, doubled down on that blurriness with a grainy black and white edit, and now I have an image that sings.
A few notes on why I think the image works now:
Another image stood out for many of the same reasons, featuring my niece and nephew.
Again, an imperfect composition with my nephews feet cut off, imperfect autofocus, crooked framing. But you can feel whats happening with my nephew dodging and my niece following from a safer distance. The depth in this image works really well with the focus on my niece. I don't think it works the same if my nephew is in focus.
All this imperfection, yet photos that feel alive, in motion, nostalgic. The composition, cropping, and editing all necessary to make them work. Take one of those three parts out and I don't think these work the same. Here's an image from the roll of black and white film I shot in Washington last fall that helped me see the possibilities. Scrolling through this roll put me in the right frame of mind to visualize a different approach.
You'll mostly notice the edit, of course. The heavy grain. The imperfect exposure and lost shadows. I got hit with nostalgia, taken back to golden hour on that ridge looking to Mt. Baker shown in the back left. So I applied the same ideas to the photos of my family and got the same effect.
Let's take a look at the RAW files to see the difference. The first shows the power of the crop, the second for me shows the power of the edit.
A key note I want to pull out here from the image subtitle: Make it feel more like a memory than a moment. This is a nice cue for approaching an edit like this.
Minimal cropping in the second image, but the edit makes all the difference.
Thinking through the path to these updated photos I notice a couple things. First, looking through my film roll helped me have a particular edit and feeling on my mind. Gritty, imperfect, nostalgic. Second, my mindset for even looking back at these photos in the first place. I was thinking a lot about my family at the time so my eye naturally caught this folder in Lightroom and clicked in. Third, time. Sometimes separation from taking the image can help you see it in a new light. What was previously a miss can now become something new.
All these pieces came together to create these photos more than a year after they were taken. It's a good reminder for me to spend more time in my archive, to purposefully seek out different editing styles, and to follow what's weighing on my heart. Family was on my mind that day, so I followed that urge when choosing what photos to work on. I've often heard the saying if someone crosses your mind to listen to that and reach out. I feel the same about this feeling when it comes to sharing images.
Photos let us give the gift of a memory, and it never gets old.
Thanks for reading!
32 » ...that inspires you. Good morning friends, You're reading Stillnotes. Notes on a photographic life. Written by me, Alex. Subscribed to by you. Thanks for reading. Today we return to my favorite type of fare—mountain photography. Straight from the heart of one of my favorite places on earth. Enjoy. I hope you have a place that inspires you. I hope you get to visit it often. A place that swells your heart in your chest, lightens your footsteps, and surges energy through your fingertips....
31 » The Dakota Series: A seven month effort to improve my photography Hello hello Stillnotes crew. I’m Alex, and this is still where we share notes, my photo-adjacent newsletter you subscribed to at some point in your doomscrolling misadventures. Thanks for being here. This issue I’m excited to share another series I worked on for about seven months before my move out of Boulder. It was a conscious effort to improve my photographic skillset, to whittle away at clear limitations I’ve noticed...
30 » Introducing: Ultra Hey y’all. Welcome back to Stillnotes, I’m Alex and this is my newsletter where I share notes on stills and sometimes just notes and sometimes just stills. You subscribed on my website. Thanks for being here. It’s been a bit, as will happen. I write to you today from my new home high in the rocky mountains. The wildflowers are firing on the trails next to my place, there are aspen stands all around the neighborhood, and I have been watching the snow melt from the...