Color Anon

If you follow my photography blog, The Glass Aerie, you will know that I have spent the last year posting black and white photos I have made.  Some were edited from color images, both digital and film, and changed to black and white, and others were from black and white film.  It’s been quite a journey!

There is a lot to learn from doing black and white.  For one thing, it has changed my perspective – or viewpoint? – concepts – preconceived ideas – about what to look for in a black and white picture.  The simple takeaway is contrast, meaning light against dark.  By asking myself how the light is working I begin to see differently.  This simple question really helps as I see colors far more readily than I see contrast.  I tend to prefer strongly contrasty and graphic expressions of black and white photography, too, and that has been a hindrance in the past.

Let’s take a look at the image below.  Other than adding my name and a frame, this is SOOC.  I made it last night when I was out toward sunset, enjoying the world after the week’s rain, and just for the pure pleasure of taking a camera out on my walk.

As you can see, the above picture is really low key. If you like subtle black and white images, it could work. The thing I like about the picture is the line of the trail – straight, and then curving around the bush into the hills and canyon beyond. Other than that, it holds little interest for my eyes. To me, the only thing to make this a worthwhile black and white picture is to really create a mood in it of some kind. Playing will help. However, before moving into black and white, I also like to see what I can do with color and contrast in LR or other editing software.

Using Lightroom, color in the image below was enhanced, as was contrast by moving the highlight slider down, increasing blacks and whites, and opening up the shadows. Vibrance, clarity, and saturation were also changed. I did not think my first image (above) caught the light at all, nor the rich tints of green that come out after a few days of rain. As it was also sunset, there was a glow to the environment, too, but the sun was blocked by vegetation. To catch this glow, I warmed the image up a bit. The result is still subtle, but more expressive of what I saw and felt when I was out.  Now, on to the black and white conversion.  The image below is the SOOC with vibrance and saturation set to zero.Next is the second color image with saturation and vibrance also set to zero.Of the above, the second one is far more interesting to me than the first.  This is why I find increasing and decreasing varying elements in a color image so important prior to converting an image to black and white.  And, at last, my final image of the trail in black and white.  This is the one I prefer to the other B&Ws, and to the original color one as well.  More punch, more contrast, a bit of blue.

Mood is enhanced or created by using contrast to define shapes, and texture.  The play of light is easily lost for me when what I see first is color.  Playing with color in post helps me begin to see the contrast of light play itself.  It is then that I consider the subtlety of long-scale contrast (lots of greys between the black and the white) or strength of short-scale contrast (fewer shades of grey).  The result is by studying black and white and forcing myself to edit in black and white, my ability to see light and its workings has been strengthened.  It is still a weak area for me nonetheless.

Perhaps next year’s project will be to post color pictures, and then a conversion to B&W.

 

Chasing the Sunset

The rains cleared and the sky was filled with clouds!  I went to my usual places but they were all closed – muddy trails, swollen creeks.  So I headed for the hills, following roads I sort of knew might give me a clear view of the sky and city.  This one was a total surprise.  Suddenly I was wondering just what I was looking at, and then it hit me – I was looking into the valley beyond the mountains surrounding my own.  The clouds were beautiful as the sun went down, so I took a series of pictures – 4 or 5 – and made a pano of them in PS.  This made my day, let me tell you!

Patterns

I have tried to “just let things happen” for several weeks now.  The truth is I don’t like it.  To me, this means just that – let stuff happen – but this is a passive approach to life and retirement as far as I am concerned.  I personally like to set daily goals, big or small, creative or chore-ish, because that is how I gauge the value of my time.  To let things happens is to wait for things to happen.  I like to make things happen, and to be open to other people inviting me to join them in their happenings.  However, if I were to wait, and just wait, what would occur?  Dishes don’t get done by themselves, photographs aren’t taken, dinner isn’t served.  That is really just being non-existent.  It is being inactive.  It is, essentially, saying no to life and all that it has to offer.

All of us have things we need to do in life.  With the free time of retirement, it seems that I should get my chore list done.  If I did, though, that is all I would do.  That Puritan heritage inculcates duty and chores as the only things of value, not indolence and lazing or creating.  Thinking seems almost a sin – that means considering rebellion against societal norms and regulations.  That means rocking the boat, having an opinion – in short, living life and experiencing life.  As someone brought up to follow rules and regulations, it can be really difficult for me to let them go.  I do know that all rules and regulations are ways to help society function, to let me and others get along, to be more constructive than destructive.  I also know that breaking these restraints allows me to grow and expand, to re-think my world view (many times over the years) and reconsider life and myself in general.

Patterns provide structure and a framework in which we can explore the world, expand our world, and experience that which is unfamiliar with relative safety.  In a bad framework, such as in families where domestic abuse is the norm, these patterns maintain destructive and negative lifestyles.  This is what family systems teach us.  They also teach us that breaking family systems creates its own chaos, which can be positive or negative, good or bad, expanding or restrictive.  For me, breaking certain patterns is necessary for growth and enjoyment, but maintaining others is a form of prison.  Chaos is not something I enjoy, though I appreciate the unexpected.  Altogether, we each need to find the structures in our lives to live fully and deeply, as well as to give in to the unpredictable and spontaneous.