Showing posts with label yearofpix. Show all posts
Showing posts with label yearofpix. Show all posts

Monday, May 31, 2010

May 31: Photo a day update

Two weeks in, and I can see some patterns emerging. I really like framing close-ups (a cheat code for forcing a better image?) and I am really paying attention to patterns I spot. No real time for rumination today, but I have managed to upload a selection to Flickr as part of the 365 set.

And here's one pick with gratitude for the fabulous weather this and last weekend - the sort of days that make me grateful all over again to live in San Francisco. The light, the breeze, and the landscape all conspire to foster an incredible sense of well-being.

"The Goddess of 17th Street"

Saturday, May 22, 2010

First week of Project 365

Based on my grand plan that began a week ago, I've heard a few grumblings that faithful readers expected me to post a new photo a day. Which as you'll see here, I have not done. I warned ya then that the idea was to *take* photos each day, but not necessarily to post daily. Reason being that it's rather a pain to download/upload, caption, tag and most of all edit down a selection. 


I've also discovered that Flickr and Picasa have their own quirks re management and organization. So - enough excuses - here are a few shots from this week. I hope to get a smoother process going this coming week and beyond. Meanwhile - extremely random glimpses from the last few days. 

Side door for apartment building - probably just behind it are the building's garbage bins. 

Las Palmas Mexicatessen, 24th & Florida.

Older mural that used to be gorgeous. I still love the light on the hills and the pitcher handle. 
It's so easy to shoot in the Mission - the pix practically take themselves. 

From earlier in the week ... 

Mika, looking terrifying? No. She's just really coming in close for a lick. 

Straight up the lightwell at my building (2 condos and a blue sky above). 

Holiday leftover on 27th Street. 

A favorite Yerba Buena sculpture: Shaking Man, by Terry Allen. 
The very epitome of 'gladhanding'. 

Entrance to the 60s exhibit at the newly-revamped Oakland Museum. 
Closeup from Lois Anderson's "Chinese Tower", Oakland Museum. 
She was an absolute Bay Area free spirit who called 
herself "Lotus Carnation" and died at 77 in 2004. 

Yes, there really is a sea dragon horse in the lobby 
of Bldg 46 (my office!) at the Googleplex. No, I don't know why. 

And that's a wrap for the week past. I'll sort out some other ways to upload and share as the days progress. What I can say is I love the idea of looking each day and shooting random images. The harder discipline is the editing and sharing. But maybe you knew that. 

Sunday, May 16, 2010

A photo a day: my 365 project

Like many people I have creative fantasties. But also like many I get bogged down in a daily routine, and tend to believe that only weekends or vacations are available to break out of it. Of course, during those allotted times, when I'm self-consciously trying to stay unscheduled I inevitably end up, as they say, 'vegging out.' Nothing to show for it, and the weekends start blurring together. And when I do head back to work,  I pine again for some eventual day when I really will make time to be creative. Most of the time I think, well, when I retire, then I'll have enough time.

Yes, I do know how stupid this sounds (and how I'd counsel against thinking this way should a friend ask for advice). So lately I've been thinking maybe making art is kind of like losing weight: you have to fit it in to your life so that it works. Don't bother with elaborate schedule upheavals or acquiring brand-new and unfamiliar equipment. Just — make it work within what you already do.

Which is why I've arrived at a simple-sounding creative project for myself, just for fun, for the new year that begins with my birthday, which is tomorrow.  Here's my thinking.

I have long loved taking photos - the act of framing and attempting to capture an image in the world always reminds me of Dorothea Lange's great line, "A camera is a tool for learning to see without a camera." I think this is how I approach photography whenever I do it, because I am forever looking around to see what stands out, what's new that I haven't seen before, what pleases my eye - camera or no camera.

Clock repair shop on Sanchez Street. Rarely open; working cat inside.
 It's certainly never been easier to take photos and share them, and that's the other part of this project: having some discipline about uploading or send pix somewhere. This serves at least two purposes. Over time, I'll see myself what patterns emerge - what draws my eye, what describes my day or conveys a feeling I have. Sharing with others is also fine, and nominally a way to stay in touch. But I'm a bit disinclined to be ubiquitous: I see altogether too many chatty lapel-grabbers online, and that's not my intent at all.

Then there's the question of what the exercise should be: take the first thing I really can focus on each day? limit myself to one photo? find something I've never noticed before? take a bunch and pick just one to upload? In the beginning, I don't think I can commit to just one approach. I read a helpful piece on a site called Photojojo, "Project 365: How to take a photo a day and see your life in a whole new way". One helpful tip: don't worry about posting every day. Shoot daily, yes, and then post maybe a couple of times a week. Ah. That I could do without fear of inundating readers with unwelcome frequency.

I already know some things that never fail to get my attention: handmade stuff in an otherwise machine-made environment. Handpainted signs, graffiti. Funny juxtapositions. Art in unexpected places (like alley murals, or quirky window displays). Patterns within patterns. Unusual colors, decorative bits where they "shouldn't" be. You'll see all of this for sure. What I'm looking forward to is to see a bunch of it over time, so that maybe I can hone my technique and think about what comes from it.

This is how art works for everyone else who makes it. I figure it's about time I follow their lead.

So the housekeeping bits: I'll probably use Flickr, and point this blog to sets I've parked there. I'll use my Canon PowerShot SD880 IS, along with my iPhone and Nexus One to shoot and upload. I'll use Picasa Web Albums to create some 'playlists' now and again, and will comment here along the way to explain what I like about what I saw.

Now then - I'm off to look. Really look.