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How to Find Inspiration for Your Photography When Your Muse is Missing

15 Jun
How to Find Inspiration for Your Photography When Your Muse is Missing

In a city full of construction sites, concrete walls tucked around a corner not visible from the street are a haven for graffiti artists. You have to go looking for them.

Maybe you just recently bought your camera, or maybe you got it a while ago. But has it been sitting on a shelf for a few months? Perhaps you have been shooting for a while but have just run out of enthusiasm? Feel like you are stuck in a rut? Like you should change it up a bit but don’t quite know how?

Or maybe you are just so overwhelmed with possibilities and potential that you are paralyzed with the indecision of what to try first?

How to Find Inspiration for Your Photography When Your Muse is Missing

Glorious spring cherry blossoms. So many shades of pink.

Inspiration is everywhere

Sometimes it’s a matter of opening your eyes and seeing the world in a different way. Perhaps you need to let go of the fear of trying something new. Lack of equipment can sometimes be an excuse. Difficulty or the cost of travel is another factor that can hold people back.

Trying new things can be scary, especially if you are new to photography and uncertain about how your images will turn out. So let me tell you one really important thing;

It doesn’t matter if you don’t get it right the first time.

Or even the twentieth time, though you might prefer to move on to something new at that point.

What is the worst that could happen if you try street photography? Pick some flowers and have a go with macro photography? Try to capture an awesome sunrise?

How to Find Inspiration for Your Photography When Your Muse is Missing

One of the best sunsets I have ever seen, absolutely stunning. Probably my 127th sunset shot, and worth the effort of the previous 126.

Kickstart your inspiration

Here are a few tips to help you kickstart your inspiration:

  • Actually get out there with your camera. Get your bum off the sofa, camera in hand, out the door in any direction. Make time for your hobby. Do it regularly. Give yourself permission to go out and shoot.
  • Go somewhere different than your usual places. Sit near a busy cafe. Take a walk in a nature reserve. Explore the sand dunes at the beach. Find a stream or river where birds are active.
  • Once you get to your new place, find a good spot and then just sit for five to 10 minutes. Immerse yourself in the sound of the place (yes take the headphones ooff). Watch the activity around you, see where the light and shadows fall, what textures are nearby. Be present and soon you will see all sorts of opportunities for images.
  • Be brave and attend events with your camera. Sports events, local festivals, markets, concerts, fairs, car rallies, agricultural shows – the list goes on and on of places you can go for minimal cost. There are people dressed up, doing interesting things, lots of different stuff to see and photograph. Walk around, watch the people, see the patterns, spot the areas of activity. Hover at the edges if that makes you more comfortable.
How to Find Inspiration for Your Photography When Your Muse is Missing

First time at Roller Derby – the lighting was awful so I decided to experiment with slower shutter speeds for fun.

  • See the small details via macro photography. Good macro lenses are expensive, so see if you can borrow or rent one to see if that is your thing.  Macro or close-up filters are a cost effective option to get you started. Look inside your pantry or fridge. See what is flowering in the garden. Setup a small studio with your tripod, a table and some natural window light and experiment.
How to Find Inspiration for Your Photography When Your Muse is Missing

Take time to see the small interesting details – this is an old cash register.

  • Learn to see in black and white. Look for contrast, texture, shapes, and lines. Try to see the image without color. At the beginning, this will be really hard, but eventually, you will start to see the core compositional elements that make for a good black and white image.
How to Find Inspiration for Your Photography When Your Muse is Missing

It was lightly raining as I took this image. The light was flat and dull, but I knew the sky would look fabulous once processed into black and white.

  • Start a photography project. There are lots of 365 Day or 52 Week Challenges around – some with themes and some just to encourage you to shoot regularly.  Try one of them or develop your own project idea.
  • Work with props. Taking straight portraits can be really challenging. Getting people to relax and smile naturally is hard. Instead, give them something to interact with and take their mind off the camera. A ball, or a hat. Perhaps a pretty shawl or wrap. A book or a bunch of flowers. Be creative, make it fun and light hearted.
How to Find Inspiration for Your Photography When Your Muse is Missing

Three ladies that I ran across and asked to pose in front of these blue statement walls. They did their own posing with no prompting from me.

  • Go out at nighttime. So many new possibilities – light painting, astrophotography, star trails, auroras, steel wool, light trails, fireworks or even kids sparklers.
  • Find a thing, anything, anywhere. Shoot it at different angles, in different kinds of light. Keep coming back and try and find a new and interesting way to capture the essence of a mundane everyday object.
How to Find Inspiration for Your Photography When Your Muse is Missing

Looks simple, try doing it backward in the dark within 30 seconds, ankle deep in snow with freezing feet running back and forth from the camera.

Endless possibilities exist

Landscapes, sunrise, sunset, wedding, portrait, boudoir, food, macro, street, dance, cats, astrophotography, waterfalls, compositing, fine art, black and white, weather, birds, architecture, events, underwater, travel, flowers, sports, product, photojournalism – all options for you to try.

The list goes on, that is just off the top of my head. There are still many more choices. Take any one of those words above, and break it down into smaller elements, and there are even more choices, for example;  travel > people, places, food, color, culture, and experiences.

How to Find Inspiration for Your Photography When Your Muse is Missing

An installation at an outdoor art festival being constructed.

Develop a habit

Some of my best work came after completing a 21-day creativity course. On day five I was to “Allocate a 15-minute time-slot to shoot anything”. The idea is that when you tell yourself it will only take 15 minutes, then you are much more likely to make the time to do it. Of course, it always took much longer, but because the effort is made to get started, suddenly it becomes fun. It doesn’t matter that it actually ends up being an hour instead.

Maybe you have kids to feed, bathe, and wrangle into bed so you feel like you cannot take the time. Instead of sitting down to Facebook or watch TV when you do have time, go get your camera instead. Talk to your family and friends, let them know it is important to you. Ask them to help – maybe they will be a model for you? Maybe they have a cool prop you could borrow?

How to Find Inspiration for Your Photography When Your Muse is Missing

Attendees at a local Zombie Run kindly agreed to lurch for me.

What makes you happy?

Where is your happy place? Is it a library? A cup of coffee at your favorite cafe? Is it down at the beach? At the park with the kids? Walking the dog? Playing a sport?

What could be better than doing your favorite thing and taking the camera along to record the experience? Kids playing in the autumn leaves, or about to push off down the slide. Your dog fetching a stick or racing along the beach. Steam rising off a cappuccino with a cupcake on the side. Frost patterns on a morning walk. Sunset setting the sky on fire. The smell of a new book. What’s your thing?

How to Find Inspiration for Your Photography When Your Muse is Missing

It’s not my thing, but street photography is hugely popular.

Learn to let it go

Don’t try too hard. Have your camera handy but take the time to be in the moment too. Genuine emotions and responses are far more compelling than a contrived situation. Learn to be patient and wait for the right moment. Sometimes just put your camera aside and let it go. Not every day will give you a keeper, or even a reason to shoot.  But you can guarantee that the best shooting opportunities will be the ones that happen when you leave your camera behind.

So in some circumstances, it may be more appropriate to be present, and leave the camera at home. It might be culturally insensitive or just plain rude. It could be more fun to enjoy being part of the event, rather than shooting from the sidelines as often happens with photographers.

How to Find Inspiration for Your Photography When Your Muse is Missing

A gorgeous art graffiti piece with the foundation for a building about to be built immediately in front of it. Taken on a step stool bought from home so I could shoot over the security fence.

Research

My favourite place for inspiration is Pinterest. I have boards dedicated to food, still life, fine art, Gothic, the macabre and pinup photography. All these things that have inspired me one way or another. Some are there to remind me to try a new thing. Others are there to remind me to keep experimenting with a style that is still new and experimental. Some are just fantastic images that delight me.

Instagram is another source of wonderful images.  Both are places you can search for reasonably specific concepts and find images to match. It is also easy to curate your feed for both, so that you get a regular supply of stuff that may inspire you.

Facebook has many groups dedicated to specific photography styles. As well as a good source of image inspiration you can also ask questions or ask for advice. Asking someone how they achieved a certain image can be a simple way of making your learning easier. Many people are often only to happy to help. Quite a few will even have blogged about the image with some backstory around how it was created.

Art galleries, museums, books on the grand masters of painting or photography are all available for viewing – many of them online.

How to Find Inspiration for Your Photography When Your Muse is Missing

A local steampunk lady agreed to pose for me in exchange for an image.

Summary

It can be easy to fall into the same old habits, sticking to one particular style or technique. Making the effort to change that is difficult. Overcoming inertia and breaking out of your comfort zone is hard.

Yet if you keep doing the same things, you will keep getting the same images, the same results. Eventually boredom will set in, causing you to put the camera aside.

My challenge to you is to instead, pick up the camera, open your eyes and give yourself a chance to truly see the world around you. Once you do that, limitless possibilities will become apparent, and your inspiration will be everywhere.

How to Find Inspiration for Your Photography When Your Muse is Missing

A light festival held in mid-winter. It was bitterly cold, but I had so much fun I went back the second night to catch all the things missed first time round.

Still, don’t try to do it all at once either, as creative fatigue and burnout can result. Learn to pace yourself. Break it down into manageable chunks, learn one thing and move on to the next. Some things will have more resonance and stay with you for longer. Others will not click with your style at all.

Conclusion

It’s possible that you could find your niche and want to stick with one particular style.  If so, then congratulations on finding your happy place. But keep in mind, even when you are in that zone, there are still ways to explore it, try different points of view, and push your boundaries.

In Big Magic, Elizabeth Gilbert writes about her theory that ideas are constantly swirling around us. But unless we are in a receptive state of mind, they will fail to find purchase:

“But sometimes – rarely, but magnificently – there comes a day when you’re open and relaxed enough to actually receive something. Your defenses might slacken and your anxieties ease, and then magic can slip through. The idea, sensing your openness, will start to do its work on you. It will send the universal physical and emotional signals of inspiration (the chills up the arm, the hair standing on the back of the neck) (…)”

Inspiration is anywhere and everywhere, we just need to make ourselves open for our muse to find us.

The post How to Find Inspiration for Your Photography When Your Muse is Missing by Stacey Hill appeared first on Digital Photography School.


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83-year-old fashionista is photographer’s muse for Sartorialist-styled blog

29 Mar

tumblr_mkce0qUZvS1rehyapo1_1280.jpg

An 83-year-old Turkish tailor has become photographer Zoe Spawton’s muse for her blog ‘What Ali Wore.’ The Tumblr blog, styled after the popular fashion photograhy blog, The Sartorialist, features just Ali and his impeccable taste in clothes. In an interview with German website Speigel.de, the photographer explains how Ali caught her eye as he passed by the cafe where she works wearing a new ensemble every day. Her daily snapshots of his ever-alternating outfits evolved into a full-blown photo project. Click through to see the photos and a link to Zoe’s blog. (via Spiegel.de)

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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[HD] MUSE new born guitar cover

24 Nov

this time I try to cover my favorite song of muse, new born. bty, I got a new core i-7 PC, and new video editor sony vegas 10 HD. it makes uploading HD video possible. (but this video is 852×480, not HD lol) sorry for my bad English. i hope you enjoy this cover. =D [description] guitar – vanzandt tlv-r2 semi-custom order amp – marshall JCM800 simulated my pod xt live camera – nikon d90 video editor – vegas HD 10 platinum suite

 
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[TAB] how to play SUPERMASSIVE BLACK HOLE MUSE [guitar lesson]

22 Nov

supermassive black hole guitar lesson with tab. hey hello today I’ll show you how to play supermassive black hole with guitar tab. I’m not good at English so if you don’t get what I say, please tell me. i hope this video helps you! relaxboi song : supermassive black hole artist : muse guitar : vanzandt tlv-r2 semi custom amp simulator & effector : pod xt live camera : nikon d90 video editor : sony vegas hd 10 recording software : kristal

 
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MUSE supermassive black hole Guitar Cover

23 Oct

my second cover of MUSE. [TAB] relaxboi.web.fc2.com Live At Wembley Stadium arrange, studio live arrange, original, Improvisation is all mixed up together…. i took this video for japanese video sharing site “NIKO-NIKO DOUGA” watchers @ NIKO-NIKO DOUGA like funny or elaborate video. so i’m afraid you feel this video is edited too much =( i delete matt’s guitar completely so all guitar sound you can hear is my work. anyway i hope you enjoy ^^ [info] equipment – check my homepage plz. relaxboi.web.fc2.com effector *classic distortion simulated by PODxtLIVE amp 2001 treadplate (MESA) simulated by PODxtLIVE camera – nikon D90
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 
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Muse

04 Nov
Es folgt ein Artikel von Nancy Eichler (Facebook), sie ist 28 Jahre alt und Berlinerin. Nancy fotografiert seit 14 Jahren “bewusster” Menschen, mag es aber nicht, wenn man sie Menschen- oder Portraitfotografin nennt, weil sie das dahinter, das innen drin festhalten will. Sie will Geschichten erzählen.

Diese Entwicklung wurde mir vor einem Jahr klar, als ich sie aussprach. Nicht, dass es beschwert, aber es ist befreiend, es sagen zu dürfen: “Ich habe eine Muse.”

Rahada

Seit ein paar Jahren kannten Rahada und ich uns über das Internet, wir kommentierten auf einer Fotoplattform unsere Bilder und erkannten in diesen, dass wir uns irgendwie auf eine Art und Weise ähneln. Gleich sind.

Rahada Rahada

Als wir uns dann im Jahr 2009 in London das erste Mal gegenüber standen, gab es keine Berührungsängste. Das erste, was er zu mir sagte war, dass meine Haare real noch schöner aussehen als auf Bildern.

Schon einen Tag später fotografierte ich ihn in einem verlassenen Krankenhauskomplex bei London. Als ich ihn durch den Sucher ansah oder eher beobachtete, wie er sich drehte, anspannte und streckte, flammten schon viel mehr Bilder in meinem Kopf auf, die nichts mit der Thematik zu tun hatten, in der wir uns an diesem Tag befanden.

Rahada Rahada
Rahada Rahada

Bisher sagte ich immer, dass ich keine Fotografin bin, die inszeniert. Seit ich Rahada kenne und ihn als meinen Freund und Muse bezeichnen kann, habe ich Ideen und inszeniere ihn in meinem Kopf.

Unsere Arbeiten entstehen aber nicht nur durch mich allein, Rahada ist ein sehr kreativer Geist. Aus einer Idee, einem groben Gerüst entsteht ein fertiges Konzept. Oft treffen wir uns sonntags und verbringen einfach Zeit zusammen.

Rahada

Und des Öfteren werden Ideen zum Leben erweckt. Ein großer und wichtiger Punkt ist, ob ich das nächste Projekt digital oder analog umsetzen will. Wenn es Schwarzweiß-Bilder werden sollen, ziehe ich die analoge Kamera vor.

Rahada

Rahada

Rahada

Ich lasse mich gern von meiner Stimmung leiten und fotografiere mich selbst. Des Öfteren möchte ich das Gefühl oder die Stimmung nicht mehr in mir tragen, drücke auf den Fernauslöser und in 1/125 Sekunde sind das Gefühl und die trüben Gedanken nicht mehr in mir. Jetzt sind sie in der Person, die auf dem Speicherchip zu sehen ist. Es fühlt sich befreiend an.

Auch mit Rahada machte ich schon Selbstportraits. Da geht es aber nie um die Bewältigung von Gefühlen in uns. Zusammen machen wir früh morgens um 7 Uhr an der Ostsee Handstand, hüpfen in dem noch kalten Sand herum und einer löst aus oder wir hüllen unsere Oberkörper in Flüssiglatex, schmeißen dabei die Kiev 88 fast vom Tisch, weil wir kein Stativadapter für sie haben, aber bei wenig Licht und einem ISO100-Film unbedingt diese Bilder machen müssen.

Rahada

Jetzt wird es langsam kälter und ich habe Rahada schon im Schnee vor meinem inneren Auge. Vor zwei Jahren stellte er sich bei -14°C in nur einem Tütü in den Schnee. Er sah bezaubernd aus, mit seinem weißen Puder auf der Haut, dem Glitzer auf seinem Haar und den lilafarbenden Federn auf seinen Wimpern. Wie nicht von dieser Welt.

Rahada

Ich danke ihm für so viel Vertrauen in mich und meine Kunst, dass wie bizarr wir ihn auch zu einem “Projekt” machen, er sich wiedererkennt und sagen kann “ja, das bin ich”. Er ist mein bester Freund, für den ich meine Hand ins Feuer legen würde.

Sein Humor, seine Gutmütigkeit, Ehrlichkeit und sein Geist sind wohl meine größte Inspiration. Und wir zwei zusammen. Ich fühle mich dann vollständig – mit ihm, in unserer Freundschaft, die kreativer und schöner nicht sein kann.


KWERFELDEIN | Fotografie Magazin

 
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Katherine: My first muse.

08 Mar

What is your Secret?

The secret is this.  Fall in love often and recklessly.  Fall in love with your camera, fall in love with natural light, fall in love with the Elinchrom Octa, fall in love with your film but most of all… fall in love with your muse. Rinse and repeat for years, maybe even a decade.

I’ve been thinking a lot about muses lately. Muse is defined as “the source of an artist’s inspiration” which means it could be just about anything. I think models have always been a huge source of inspiration, historically and personally. For me being a muse is more than just beauty, more than just being talented, and more than being able to help create amazing images. A muse needs to make me struggle, to suffer, to really, really feel things I don’t want to feel.

The best of friends in life are the ones that push you the most I think, and by that same token the best muses for my photography have been models that made me work harder. Emotionally and artistically. I’ve had dozens of favorite models over the years but there are only a handful that have transcended to a muse.

Katherine Franco

My first muse, we met in 2001 – almost ten years ago. I met Katherine before I knew much of anything about photography, all I knew was I was interested in it and I wanted to know more. Over the years we have yelled at each other, she has made me cry, I’m sure I’ve made her cry, we’ve gone months without speaking, we’ve been on road trips, we’ve laughed until we were out of breath, we’ve talked for hours about boys, girls, love, life, pain and most of all I’ve tried to convince Katherine (over and over) that she is as close to perfect as anyone ever needs to be.

All the while my photography evolved (and for some years revolved) around her.

I’ve known Katherine longer than I’ve known my wife. She has always been a friend, never a potential girlfriend (even when we were both single) and that is important I think, at least for me. One of my favorite things about our relationship is the proof that you can be close to someone without letting it get complicated with… well, you know. Heather Hankins left a comment on my facebook page that perfectly describes this, “The inspiration from a muse transcends the natural instinct of sexual expression.” So well said.

If you want to become a better photographer and a better person, find a muse and shoot. I shoot a lot of people, and I’m always looking for my next 10 year model… but they’d have a lot to live up to because I absolutely love this one.

The greatest hits of the last ten years with my original muse. You’ll notice her change and my photography style change… over and over. This is important too.

Music courtesy of the INSANELY talented group Mountain Hymns.  Listen to them for free at http://soundcloud.com/mountainhymns – by the way, the singer is also my cousin, Seaver Yates, of Farmington, Utah.  He’s a pretty cool guy, but he sure bugs me about giving him a free steak a lot…  :-)


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