M
Mitch Alland
Guest
Agreed, John. Good clarification. I at war with one-liners. <g>
—Mitch/Bangkok
http://www.flickr.com/photos/10268776@N00/
—Mitch/Bangkok
http://www.flickr.com/photos/10268776@N00/
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Hey, Maggie pet snapping is easier to explain than my shooting Roadkills.Is anyone else besides me here more inclined to agree with negative assessments of their output? (Though the voice saying "I'm a damn fine photographer, you idjit!" is louder than the agreement with the guy this time.)
I have to say that the thing I hate most about my photography is my obsessive pet snapping. But then, I shoot what I can shoot.
There you go again, John, taking nothing but pretty pictures of pretty things!Hey, Maggie pet snapping is easier to explain than my shooting Roadkills...
I'm in Dublin,Texas but I used to get to France every few years. Love Paris and love the south even more. I was last there in 1999 to attend Camerone in Aubagne with the Legion. Then the dot coms went bust 2000 and I went back to academia. I got an invite from them to it due to book I've been researching for 20 years on Augustus Carl Buchel. I will unfortunately be in Texas in mid-April and see no travel in the near future due to my wife's health.Below your avatar it's says "Dublin, Texas", not "Paris, Texas"! Seriously, where are you? I'll be in Paris from mid-April for a few weeks.
—Mitch/Bangkok
http://www.flickr.com/photos/10268776@N00/
I'm the RFF antichrist! I take photos of pets with an M8! BWAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!! :ROTFL:
This idea has kept me photographing, day in and day out, through many frames of crap.Our busy, time-consuming and important careers and our important family commitments often make us photograph only intermittently, when we can find time and as subject matter either comes our way or, as is often the case, we travel to it, sometimes quite far. But this is not the best road to good pictures and our growth as picture makers. With a few word changes [mine in square brackets], what the English novelist and short story writer W. Somerset Maugham once said about writing holds true if for photography: “Writing [photographing] every day,” Maugham said, “is no guarantee that you will make a masterpiece [good pictures]. But you will never [consistently] make a masterpiece [good pictures] if you don’t write [photograph] every day.”