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Why You Might Want to Consider Keeping a Visual Diary

27 Aug

Maintaining creativity can be difficult for artists at the best of times. Fortunately, there are ways to combat the dreaded artist’s-block. Carried around in the crook of many an artist’s arms, the visual diary has developed alongside the very beginnings of art history.

Famous artists like Leonardo da Vinci, Frida Kahlo, Vincent van Gogh and Kurt Cobain all kept detailed visual journals for their thoughts and creative progress. Cecil Beaton, famous for his portraits of Marilyn Monroe, religiously kept scrapbooks of drawings, newspaper clippings, paintings, and copious amounts of photographs. Art school curricular also relies heavily on the use of a personal visual diary to detail a student’s thoughts and processes.

Why You Might Want to Consider Keeping a Visual Diary

Materials in a visual diary aren’t limited to just pieces of paper. Here I’ve fixed a piece of plastic that I wanted to use later into my visual diary for safe keeping.

Why You Might Want to Consider Keeping a Visual Diary

Keeping track of different film I’ve used is easy with a visual diary – I simply stow the flattened box for later reference.

What is a visual diary?

As the name suggests, visual diaries are a collection of visual references compiled by an artist. Made up of notes, diagrams, collage, photography, images, and detritus, a visual diary can contain any number of materials compiled into a series of books or folders.

The purpose of a visual diary is to provide space for an artist to work within visually. By documenting your own progress and inspiration in a physical diary, you can build important skills and identify trends to further your creative skill. A visual diary also provides a cathartic space to record ideas and personal observations. You can combine private journal entries with test-prints and swatches, or you can keep a strictly photo-based body of work. You can even use separate books for separate media or projects. It doesn’t have to be pretty, as long as it works for you.

Why You Might Want to Consider Keeping a Visual Diary

Proof sheets of negatives are most useful when stored in a visual diary for easy reference.

What diary should I use?

One of the most popular formats of visual diaries is spiral-bound booklets. These booklets can be laid flat on a surface and have thick paper for sketching. Plus, you can stick a pen down the spiral joint so you’ll always have a marker at hand.

A4 and A5 booklets are generally the most popular sizes for visual journals. Larger journals are harder to transport and a very small booklet may be too little to stick cut-outs in. Lined and unlined booklets are another consideration. I personally prefer an unlined book – every sheet is like a blank canvas as it holds nothing but potential! Having said that, grid books can be useful for structured lighting diagrams and geometrical drawings.

An alternative to keeping a booklet as a visual diary, mood boards are another great way to maintain inspiration and direction. Having a mood board to look over and update frequently can be just as beneficial as having a visual diary, only it’s a little less portable. All you need is a good cork board, a few pins and a choice selection of images and notes. You can even use several mood boards, each sectioned off for different moods or projects.

Why You Might Want to Consider Keeping a Visual Diary

Keeping a mood or cork board full of artistic material can be a great source of inspiration for projects.

Why keep a visual diary?

There are many benefits to keeping a visual diary.

Organizationally speaking, having a visual diary keeps all your artistic detritus in one place. I’m definitely guilty of spreading my materials out, scribbling notes on bits of paper and losing them shortly after. Writing notes in your journal or taping pieces of paper with notes into your diary will keep them together so you can easily refer back to them later. Visual diaries are also great for unexpected flashes of inspiration – try keeping one next to your bed for those breakthroughs in the middle of the night.

Your visual diary is your own personal work space. Recording your artistic progress now will create a timeline of your personal development to refer back to later. This can help maintain your focus or realign your artistic direction. Once you get into the habit of filling in your visual diary, you will develop a pattern of creativity, training your photographic eye. Plus, if you aren’t keen on posting personal thoughts in an online blog, paper-based visual diaries are a safe space for your own creativity.

Visual journaling is good for your health too. Cutting images out and doodling in your visual diary can be a very meditative process, increasing mindfulness and reducing stress. Simple tasks like cutting and pasting photographs clear your mind of negative thoughts with repetitive motion and critical thinking.

Why You Might Want to Consider Keeping a Visual Diary

Negatives and digital proof sheets that need to be close at hand for projects are easy to find and revise in a visual diary.

Conclusion

Keeping a visual diary is a great way to boost inspiration, consolidate thoughts and even improve your mental health. As a placeholder for ideas and reference material, keeping a visual journal will quickly become an invaluable tool for developing your photography. Think of it as an artistic space, created and curated by you!

Visual diaries are not only great for storing inspirational material but for recording things like photography expenses or even your wish list.

The post Why You Might Want to Consider Keeping a Visual Diary by Megan Kennedy appeared first on Digital Photography School.


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4 Steps for How to Make a Creative Photo Diary

11 Apr

If you are a visual learner like me, seeing images and written words reinforces your memory, and enhances your learning. Concepts, ideas, and experiences associated with images, colors, and action, stay longer in our memory, help us savour the moment, and relive the events more clearly.

Spring is in sight, the days are getting longer and lighter, let’s go out and make the most of the season and make some new memories. Here’s a fun personal photography project for you: write a creative diary in pictures!

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A diary or a journal is a record of your day to day life and experiences. Entries report both mundane and unusual goings-on, your emotions, thoughts and feelings, your actions and reactions, including opinions that may even be outside your immediate experience. Diaries and journals tend to be written in a chronological sequence.

Let’s apply this definition to a photo diary and see how well you can record a point in your life using pictures alone. The challenge is whether you can piece together a coherent and complete story, just by looking at the pictures alone.

Here are four basic components of  a creative photo diary. When making yours, feel free to be as exhaustive as you like. In this example, I will show photos under each component and hope that you will try and piece together the entire story. That way we can gauge just how strongly and effectively the photos alone were able to recount the narrative.

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#1 Set the context – lay out the plan

Think of this like a prologue or an introduction in a book. Include photos of the locality and vary the angles; wide scenes, close ups, details, panoramas. Don’t forget to take photos of preparation, getting ready for the trip, or some action en-route to the destination.

Set the mood. If it’s a gloomy and rainy day, take pictures of the rain or the storm clouds. If it’s a sunny day, snap photos of the sun, flare, and silhouettes included. Keep your eyes peeled and look around you. What do you see on the way to your destination? Any interesting sights? Anything out of the ordinary? Anything special or alluring? Anything new that you have never seen before? Or perhaps it has always been there but you just never bothered to look close enough until now.

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#2 Have an opening chapter – a beginning

You have reached your destination and thus the narrative begins its ascent. So far you have only given glimpses of your main character, clues to the destination, snippets to the story. Now you are ready to introduce your characters and show more of their personalities. Make them shine and take center stage.

Vary your images by employing different angles; close up, far and wide, bird’s eye view, worm’s eye view. How about an inquisitive and questioning view? Be creative about it and think outside the box. There are many ways of presenting a person’s character like emphasizing color, favourite objects, unique accessories, action, identifying marks, etc., other than the ubiquitous frontal portrait. The obvious isn’t always the most interesting.

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What happened when you reached your destination? Did the plans change? Were there distractions or unforeseen events that led you to switch gears, or take a different route? Or did you head straight on to what you wanted to do? Were there any curious twists to the plan, or some surprises – nice ones or otherwise?

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#3 Inject some action or drama

It may be that nothing happens that is spectacular or which causes emotional upheaval. That doesn’t mean you can’t create something dramatic or notable. You can focus on particular emotions, or something pretty mundane, and make a choice to celebrate life’s simple pleasures. If on the other hand there was plenty of action, choose a few main actions shots of defining moments from the day, especially those that elicited the most impressive reaction, or the quietest but most precious twinkle of an eye.

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Adopt a photojournalistic stance, and record what happens without thinking too much about meaning or composition. Photograph what catches your eye, or that which you get drawn to instinctively. Trust your eyes to lead you to interesting contrasts and juxtapositions – light and shade, silence and noise, darkness and light. Aim to capture and savour every highlight. Don’t rush, but linger and indulge in the moment. The more you focus on something, no matter how small, the bigger its effects on you will be. Find an experience in the simplest of things; you are writing a story. Writers emphasize, exaggerate, infer, and aim for a climax. Don’t be afraid to do the same with your pictures. Be pro-active and creative.

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#4 Start the closing chapter

In a book, this part is usually referred to as falling action. It comes after all the excitement and drama happen. It’s like a letting out a big sigh and things start to gather at a much slower pace. Prepare your audience for the conclusion, and end of the story. Unlike the conclusion in a book where the plot is usually unravelled, this part could plainly be writing the last paragraph to the entry of your diary for the day. It could be as simple as taking your shoes off after a long and tiring walk, drinking a well deserved cup of tea after a day full of challenges, or the sun slowly setting or the moon rising.

Remember the purpose of a diary is to record, preferably in detail, what transpired during your day; the running of events, emotions, actions, thoughts, ideas, changes, differences, transformations. So many elements to capture in a few photos. But perhaps in and amongst all the snapshots from the day, there could be one photo that somehow encapsulates how you may be feeling at the end. Use that photo to close your diary entry, and end your story.

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Have you attempted a creative photo diary in the past? If not, I hope you try it one of these days and enjoy the experience. What do you think is the story in this example above? Please share your thoughts in the comments below.

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The post 4 Steps for How to Make a Creative Photo Diary by Lily Sawyer appeared first on Digital Photography School.


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Civic photo diary ‘Snap/Shot Galleria’ features raw street scenes of L.A.

30 May

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In this article, the founder of photo site Snap/Shot Galleria Kwasi Boyd-Bouldin explains why he wanted to create a platform for images true to the ‘experience’ of living in LA. The site features four core photographers who use mobile devices and more to capture city life as they see it, and their gritty visions of street-level Los Angeles highlight the gulf between entertainment industry glitz and everyday struggles. Learn more at connect.dpreview.com.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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