Archives For 365 project

Featuring photographers and the art they are creating and sharing is one of the most rewarding outcomes of my tasra365 photography project. Not only does it give a voice to other artists on their journey, but it provides invaluable inspiration and information to fellow artists along the way.

I hope you are as inspired by these stories as I am. This week, Natalyn Bradshaw shares about her beginnings as a photographer with “craptastic Polaroids” and “Instamatic images.”

I’ve always loved taking pictures.

As a teenager I took tons, and thought nothing of it. It was just to preserve a memory and nothing else. The photos didn’t necessarily look good; there were lots of “Say Cheese!” moments, and many of the photos were craptastic Polaroids (certainly not the cool artistic “Boho” polaroids of today) or fancier (read: glossy Fotomat prints) quality Kodak Disk or Instamatic images.

And I loved all of them. Adored them.

dijea glasses Feature Friday: Craptastic Polaroids and Instamatic Images (Repost)

Image © Natalyn Bradshaw

I didn’t care that I lacked “skill.” My objective was not to achieve proper lighting, get crisp details, or make sure there were catchlights in all of my friends’ eyes. It was to just capture the memory of being at a party, or at Six Flags, or at the beach. My dad was the “real” photographer. He knew how to do all of that other stuff. I just watched him when I was a little girl and marveled at all of his equipment and late nights in our den-turned-darkroom. After he died, I had his negative slides and prints, and my own craptastic and “fancier” cameras, to keep me company. I appreciated and respected his artistry, but still wasn’t the least bit upset that my talent in that arena was non-existent. I went on about my business, capturing memories with my friends.

Fast forward years later to adulthood, and my new objective was not far removed from the old one. Capture memories of my children, however I could get them. Slowly, however, I began to get a little more concerned about how my pictures came out, because they were of my children. So I was much more careful and started paying attention to things I never had before, like:

  • Finding the light.
  • Getting crisp details.
  • Having the eyes in focus.
  • Getting that weird “sparkle” in the eyes.

When I achieved that, I noticed, and marveled. My loved ones around me did too.

dijea vintage flower Feature Friday: Craptastic Polaroids and Instamatic Images (Repost)

Image © Natalyn Bradshaw

So, I finally broke down and saved up for something I had wanted for years: a DSLR camera. Just an entry-level, to get me started. Because I was under the impression that the camera would make my photos even better. And to me, it did. I was so happy shooting away in “Auto” and loving the results.

Then, somehow I stumbled upon Tasra’s twitter and blog and got the crazy idea that if I joined her on this 365 challenge and learned more things about my camera, my camera would take even more astonishing pictures and I would be completely amazed!

So, as I followed along, day after day, I discovered something. It wasn’t necessarily my camera that was taking the astonishing pictures that I was loving so much. Even if I didn’t always choose the right setting, I still captured a moment, a memory, that I cherished. I got the same feeling I got as a teenager. It didn’t matter to me if they were technically correct or not. I realized that even those first photos of my children with my DSLR didn’t grab me because of the technical “better-ness.” They all grabbed my heart because they were wonderful memories, captured.

I think anyone who captures moments that grab hearts consistently can be labeled a photographer.

dijea barren tree Feature Friday: Craptastic Polaroids and Instamatic Images (Repost)

Image © Natalyn Bradshaw

Why is it that no one wants to focus on losing 1 pound or finishing 1 task?

Why don’t we celebrate when we finish cooking one family dinner or successfully putting our children safely into bed one more night?

Worse yet, is that not only do we not focus on or celebrate the small accomplishments, we often discount and negate them. AM I WRONG? How did you respond the last time you crossed something off your to-do list? Were you elated and giving yourself a silent pat on the back or was the excitement short-lived as you looked at the 37 other tasks staring back at you?

If we want to Fear. Less. we must give ourselves credit for the small things.

You don’t have to throw a party, but you can if you want. I won’t stop you. Every day you take another picture for your 365 project, or choose a healthy meal instead of fast food, or sit down for five minutes to read your child a story, it matters.

When I issued this week’s challenge to complete, write down and share 2 statements, it may have seemed like something small. What difference does it make, you may have thought. You might have completed the statements in your head, but didn’t want to write it down or share it. I’m telling you it makes all the difference in the world.

It’s the small things that make or break us,
that bring us to completion or leave us always waiting,
hoping and wishing the stars would align so we could get started.

I’m just saying, if you want to see your life change and your dreams come true, harness the power of small.

Start today. Start now.

Featuring photographers and their images is one of the most rewarding outcomes of my tasra365 photography project. It provides a voice to other artists on their journey, and offers invaluable inspiration to fellow artists.

I hope you are as inspired by these stories as I am. This week, Sandra Marek shares about her photographic learning journey.

It all started about 3 years ago when I wanted a nice camera to take “better” pictures for my scrapbooking hobby, so my husband gave me a Nikon D-80 for Christmas. I shot in Auto Mode for the first year. One year later, I purchased a used Nikon D-300. I started a picture a day project/blog about a year and a half ago, with a group of photographers of all skill levels.

Bebe Feature Friday: Photography Without Direction

Image © Sandra Marek

For the first year, I literally just took pictures. I had no direction, no guide and no plan. Pictures of everything and anything would make an appearance in my blog, once I even included my laundry. Most of these images were not very creative, just point and shoot, but I worked on learning something about photography every day.

On February 14, 2010 I came across Tasra Mar’s Blog in which she says that our photography will improve by 300% if we:

  1. Take at least one picture a day.
  2. Read at least 1 page in the camera manual
  3. View other professional images every day.

That day I signed on – I took the challenge. Six and a half months later I have completely read the users manual for the D-300 and I have followed her recommendation to become a better photographer. I have also taken on a daily challenge (The Daily Shoot) in which they give you a guide line for your picture of the day. My learning curve has tripled in the last six months.

Flora 399x600 Feature Friday: Photography Without Direction

Image © Sandra Marek

These are a few of the things I’ve learned in my photographic journey:

  • We all need a little help along the way and it’s o.k. to ask when you are stuck, there are people willing to help.
  • Challenges are good for growth, it makes you think outside of the box.
  • I can study other people’s work, outside of a classroom setting, and find out what it is I like about it, then “lift” my own style and include what I have learned from it in my own work.
  • The camera is only as good as the person holding it.
  • It helps me grow faster when I share what I’ve learned.
  • I have to have tough skin, if I want to continue on this journey.
  • It will all pay off in the end…
Baby C Feature Friday: Photography Without Direction

Image © Sandra Marek

I’m reading the book Vision Mongers by David duChemin and he puts into words what it feels like in my life every day.

It’s the calling, the passion, the vision. It makes me pick up my camera every single day, sometimes several times a day. It makes me look at objects/people and wonder how I can shoot it creatively. I do it because I cannot “not” do it. It may not always be my best but it’s my best for that day.

So I will continue to pick up the camera every single day, I will continue to take pictures because I cannot “not” do it. I no longer shoot in Auto mode and I see the world in a “different” light. I see colors, shapes, light and shadows. I see details. I have a greater appreciation for the world around me. I have found my passion and my drive.

sandra marek door 428x600 Feature Friday: Photography Without Direction

Image © Sandra Marek

There is an art and science to getting and maintaining constant improvement in your life and creative endeavors.

This post will look at how you can transform your photography, as seen through the lens of my own transformation, as well as set the bar for what’s next in the coming 365 days.

Here’s what I’ve found to work well for completing a 365 day challenge…

  1. CLARITY. Make sure you know exactly what you’ve committed to and write it down, preferably somewhere public. If you don’t, your mind will play tricks on you and allow you to back out of what you know you really want to accomplish.
  2. CONSISTENCY. During the first 30 days, you MUST meet or exceed your challenge requirements every single day. The force of habit in those first 30 days will inspire and drive you through the rough middle stages of your transformation.
  3. COURAGE. It often takes more courage to continue a task than to start one. The reason is that initial expectations and notions of greatness must be abandoned. In order to complete your task, you must accept “good enough” on your way to “greatness.”
  4. COMMUNITY. You can transform alone like the caterpillar becoming a butterfly, but it’s much easier when you are surrounded by community. Don’t stay in your cocoon, spread your wings, join with others, and learn to fly together.
  5. COMPLETION. There is fanfare in beginnings, but transformation happens upon completion. Many start the race, but not everyone finishes. Be a finisher. Even if you end up crawling across the finish line, do not give up. Remember the tortoise… he always wins.

Completing the first year of tasra365 was a bit anti-climactic. I’m not sure what I expected, but it didn’t show up. I actually felt depressed after I clicked the Publish button on my final post. My spirits sank a bit, rather than rising up and shouting.

What was this? After all that work, all the time invested, how could I be disappointed and discouraged?

Let this be a warning to those of you still on your journey… it may not happen to you, but if it does, I found a solution. I needed another mountain to climb, a challenge to face, an adventure to begin. Until I found a new beginning, I would sit in the past of my accomplishment, rather than let the future spur me on to greater transformation.

So here is the plan…

tasra365 meets tasra52

Today is the beginning of tasra365 – Year 2. I’m taking on a new challenge to transform my writing 300% in one year. For now, the challenge is to do some creative writing daily. That could be a blog post, morning pages, journal, prayer, novel, etc. There is no word minimum or maximum, but it must be writing, not editing. It starts today with this blog post and will continue throughout the next 365 days – some online, some offline, but daily commitment to developing my writing once again (more on why I chose that area in a later post).

Today is also the beginning of tasra52 – a weekly challenge. The past 365 days focused on photography, understanding my camera and learning how to be a better photographer. The next 52 weeks will focus on taking those images and transforming them creatively after-capture. I’m setting a weekly challenge for myself to transform my post processing skills. At a minimum, I’ll choose one image and focus on post processing, which could mean limiting myself to only Lightroom or a certain number of actions, it could mean creating a new preset or Photoshop action, it could mean processing and recording my steps so I can start building favorite images recipes and batch processing. The options are limitless, but bottom line is that once a week I’ll focus on everything after capture.

There are many reasons I chose that topic for tasra52, but the image below is a perfect example. I processed this image last week and love the look. Unfortunately, I didn’t keep the PSD layered file, nor did I write down the steps I took to create it. That means it’s basically one of a kind… great for painters who are selling million dollar paintings, not so great for me when I really like and want to duplicate the look for other images. So, next time it’s going to be part of tasra52 and I’m going to be able to share with you every step I took so you can try it at home too!

Are you with me? What do you think of these new challenges? I’d love to get your input!

teen identity whitney senior Transformation by Numbers: How to Create Constant Improvement

A special thanks for all who commented on the blog, Facebook and Twitter with your congratulations yesterday. When I read your comments, tears came to my eyes. That community piece in our transformation is so vital and knowing the journey had been valuable to you as well made it all worthwhile.

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It’s not by spending thousands of dollars on the latest gear and lighting equipment, according to Zack Arias who learned his lesson the hard way.

It’s not by pretending to be someone you’re not because we’re supposed to K.I.R. (“keep it real”)… at least that’s what Jasmine Star says and it seems to be working pretty well for her.

It’s not by taking a perfect picture because Joe Buissink says they don’t exist.

Have you figured it out yet? How do photographers really get better? How do they go from the green box of automatic to the masterful “M” of Manual?

tasra365 finale photo collection How Photographers Really Get Better (D365)

One word: WORK.

Encapsulated in that one word are variations on the theme like discipline, commitment, perseverance, sacrifice, connection, vision and honesty.

The work isn’t always external with the camera, sometimes it’s the hard work of hammering out your vision or unearthing your passion. Sometimes it’s about taking a good long look in the mirror and changing the things you don’t like staring back at you.

tasra365 finale photo collection 3 How Photographers Really Get Better (D365)

How do I know? 365 days of doing the hard work has netted me some benefits and improvements in my images that are not only unexpected, but have been highly rewarded as well. From publication to awards, accolades and testimonials, the return on investment in the tasra365 project has been more than I set out to achieve.

Did I really believe it was possible to improve 300% in one year when Scott Bourne issued the challenge? Not really. I thought maybe 100% and would have been happy with even those results. But I have to admit… he was right.

tasra365 finale photo collection 2 How Photographers Really Get Better (D365)

Dedication to taking an image every day, reading your camera manual and studying the work of master photographers will yield photographic improvement you never dreamed possible. I’m speaking from my own experience and that of over 520 other photographers who joined the challenge at some point in the last year.

The process works. It’ll change your images. It’ll change your life.

The only question left is… are you ready? This is your time. Tonight. Today. This moment. This now.

Don’t leave the moment of today without making a commitment to yourself. Whether that’s signing up for the challenge, getting connected with other photographers (have you signed up for the newsletter?), staying inspired, or reading a camera manual page ever day.

Do something.

Do the work.

tasra365 finale photo collection 4 How Photographers Really Get Better (D365)

The Patterns You See (D364)

Tasra Dawson —  August 30, 2010 — 1 Comment

There are patterns we see and ones we miss. Which are more important?

I’ve noticed patterns in the reasons people start a 365 and patterns in the reasons they quit. I’ve noticed patterns in the images I take and the way I read my camera manual. Particularly in the last few weeks, I’ve noticed patterns in the images and events I shoot and the way I process and post them.

But I can guarantee you that there are patterns I don’t see… patterns in the number and style of images, patterns in the way I write and communicate, even patterns in the way I share images.

WHAT DO YOU SEE?
With only two days left in this 365 challenge, I’m anxious to hear what patterns you noticed throughout the year or even in the last month… what patterns of style and theme… communication and sharing… or anything else you picked up on. Help me see what I may have missed so we can all learn!

One definite pattern I know I’ve seen is the increase in images related to Teen Identity. That’s definitely a function of the business growing and expanding, which I believe is in direct correlation to my commitment to improve my craft. In keeping with that… here’s an image of the latest set of rep cards we created for our teen models.

teen identity rep cards The Patterns You See (D364)

With names like Hot Chocolate, Techno, Royal Twist, Zensational and Sasquatch, you know these are not your mother’s school supplies. I’ve got a fantastic collection of these to give away to one lucky reader, so keep reading!

Carolina Pad is the maker of these creative and fun notebooks, journals, binders, and folders and they can be found at Target, Staples, Office Max, Michaels, CVS and more! When we first opened the box with all the goodies, my daughter and I called dibs on our favorites… she got most of them. She is the one back in school, after all. Here’s what she had to say about the supplies:

I was extremely excited to receive the school materials whose bright colors and designs helped add some spice to my supplies. I love being able to distinguish between the journals, binders, and folders by their design so it makes it easy to spot exactly which subject I need in the moment. All of the supplies proved themselves to not only be extremely cute, but also practical. Nothing begins to fall apart even when battered against the sides of a book bag all day. I love my Studio C school supplies!

tasra365 carolina pad School Supplies Get a Makeover: Review and Giveaway (D358)HERE’S HOW TO WIN!

Leave a comment about who you’d give the supplies to – even if it’s yourself!

For extra entries, stop by the Studio C by Carolina Pad Facebook and Twitter pages (@carolinapad) to say hi! Then come back here and leave another comment… it’ll give you an extra two entries!

tasra365 carolina pad 2 School Supplies Get a Makeover: Review and Giveaway (D358)

twitter Twitter Tuesday Bright and EarlyBright and early, got your images ready to share? It’s easy peasy.

Guidelines:

  1. Post your photo of the day or week on your blog or Flickr account, with a link back to this post so others can check out the list too.
  2. Tweet your image and link with hashtag #tasra365 (you can use Facebook if you’re not on Twitter yet).
  3. Add your twitter handle or blog name and URL with the button below.

Make sure to check out the special edition of tasra365 where we feature photographers just like you! Wanna be featured? Just leave me a comment.

3 Photographers Connect and Share on Twitter TuesdayThat’s right… connect, share and grow! Studying other photographers images will help develop your photographer’s eye, so why not join the fun!

I LOVE seeing your creative images and being inspired by your photography and your writing. Make sure to check out the special edition of tasra365 where we feature photographers just like you! Wanna be featured? Just leave me a comment.

Guidelines:

  1. Post your photo of the day or week on your blog or Flickr account, with a link back to this post so others can check out the list too.
  2. Tweet your image and link with hashtag #tasra365 (you can use Facebook if you’re not on Twitter yet).
  3. Add your twitter handle or blog name and URL with the button below.

3 Create and Share with Twitter TuesdayCommercial photographer Chase Jarvis recommends that photographers create and share… then sustain. So why not get started today by creating an image then sharing it with your fellow photographers on Twitter Tuesday!

I LOVE seeing your creative images and being inspired by your photography and your writing. Make sure to check out the special edition of tasra365 where we feature photographers just like you! Wanna be featured? Just leave me a comment.

Guidelines:

  1. Post your photo of the day or week on your blog or Flickr account, with a link back to this post so others can check out the list too.
  2. Tweet your image and link with hashtag #tasra365 (you can use Facebook if you’re not on Twitter yet).
  3. Add your twitter handle or blog name and URL with the button below.