We might take a page from the workshop book...

- Each of us define to some degree what we're considering as our day's subject idea...
   yes, actually write it down.
- Shoot 50-100 exposures.
- Put them together as thumbnails without editing in a "proof sheet" and study them together afterwards.

... which inspires a 'get together for dinner a few days to a week later for review' event. :-)

I get a huge amount of value out of looking at each session's images as a group. Tells me a lot about what I'm doing, where I'm going with the day's work.

Godfrey


On Oct 5, 2005, at 3:31 PM, Bruce Dayton wrote:

Tips about what kinds of things catch your eye, composition, showing
sense of place versus tight shots, etc.  To you it may not sound like
much, but to some of us, you may have a tidbit or two that helps.

--
Best regards,
Bruce


Wednesday, October 5, 2005, 2:10:13 PM, you wrote:

SB> In all honesty, I don't know what tips I can share. I just wander about
SB> and snap the shutter every now and then.

SB> I'm probably going to bring the K24/2.8 (might be interesting to compare SB> 24's), the K30/2.8 or a 35mm, plus a couple of A lenses. The 18mm is
SB> vacationing in Iowa otherwise I'd bring it along as well.

SB> Shel



[Original Message]
From: Juan Buhler



The only somewhat "rare" lenses I have that I could bring are the
K24/3.5, K30/2.8 and the Industar 50/3.5 (looks great on the istD.)
And Shel, I will bring Rolling Red's FA40/2.8 pancake too if you want
to check it out.

Cheers,

j

--
Juan Buhler
http://www.jbuhler.com
photoblog at http://photoblog.jbuhler.com







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