Melissa Aldrich

Learn to Critique Photos {Beginner Photography Class}

Learn to Critique Photos

Here in the beginning of this series there’s going to be a pile of super informative posts.  It’s a necessary evil.  Without knowing about your camera and why it does what it does, you’re not able to utilize it to the fullest.  But I don’t want you to just be sitting here absorbing all this information and not practicing and growing.  So while I’m preparing a post on how cameras work and the types of cameras out there, we’re going to learn to critique photos.  Starting with self-critique.

Critique sort of gives me the heebie jeebies.  You know the kind of feeling where even the most powerful antiperspirant in the universe will not be any aid to you whatsoever. Oh, wait… maybe I’m the only one who sweats like a marathon runner in these situations.  I digress. Ahem.

No matter how much we fear critique, we must understand that constructive criticism is the quickest road to growth. I know that when my loving friends point out sin in my life, not only do I recognize my error faster, but I’m able to identify both the cause and the solution relatively quickly with their help.  This same process occurs in photography critique.

When you can clearly state what you like about a photograph, clearly state what could be improved in a photograph, and give clear suggestions for improvement (whether on your own photo or on someone else’s photo), you’re able to improve each shot you take.  Additionally, recognizing what you love about each photograph will help you develop a consistent style.

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Assignment #1

So here’s your mission possible.  Over the next three weeks, I want you to pull out your camera and use it for 5-10 minutes each day.  Take photos of whatever your heart desires.  Flowers, trees, tickle fights with your kiddos, sleeping babies, your sink full of dirty dishes, your sister’s jewelry collection.  The sky is the limit!  (really… some images of the sky might be rocking awesome and very challenging to capture).  Record whatever it is you love to photograph most.

On the last few days in this three week period, I want you to pick 5-10 images that are your very favorite. You can edit if you’re familiar with editing or just leave them straight out of the camera (SOOC).  Pick the images that make your soul sing and slap them into a blog post (or Flikr album for those of you who may not blog). Get them in chronological order of the date/time they were taken. You might find that all your images were shot on the same day and are part of a story. You may find that your images are vastly different, some dark and moody with others whimsical and ethereal.  That’s totally okay.  Just pick your favorites.

Under each picture write a sentence or two about what you love most about that image.  Was it the way the sun light just seems so warm and inviting?  Was it the emotion captured?  Was it an emotion that your image evoked in you? Was it the way your eye feels drawn to some part of the image that you might not have even noticed when you clicked the shutter?

Now take a deep breath, put on a good coat of your favorite antiperspirant, and look at those photos with a critical eye.  Is your focus sharp?  Do the colors seem funky and maybe too orange or too blue? Is there something distracting in the background?  Do you wish your subjects were in a different part of the frame?  Is the image darker than your eye saw it?  Is the image too light?  Is your subject squinting?  Does it look like a tree branch is growing out of your subjects head?  Did you over edit a certain area (if you are able to ice skate on your subjects sparkling eyes… you might have over sharpened)?

The Oreo Cookie when you Learn to Critique Photos

I’m a firm believer that when you critique anyone on anything you need to make an Oreo cookie. Good, not so good, and good.  Hearing just the bad doesn’t always motivate me to change. Hearing only the bad might make me angry or resentful.  I might feel hurt or hopeless that I could ever change.  But hearing good, not so good, and good again, lets me know that the person giving the critique cares for me, sees an area of needing growth, and also recognizes my efforts.  I feel both humbled and encouraged.

After you’ve told us why the photo is your favorite and recognized areas that might need growth, I want you to go back and look for the good.  Compare the photo to ones you took earlier in the three weeks.  Did your skills grow? How?  Did you manage to freeze the action of that tickle fight where you hadn’t managed to before?  Did you blur out what might have been a distracting background?  Did you apply something you had just learned while completing the mini homework from the two Friday articles? What else makes this photograph good?

Turning in your Assignment

On Tuesday January 29th, 2013, I want you to be super brave and click publish on this blog post or Flikr album.  I’m going to host a link up here so we can all view each other’s work. You’ll be instructed to visit the sites of the two people before you and pick one of their images to practice giving constructive criticism to another person.  Don’t skip this step!  First, commenting on someone’s post is going to help build this community.  Second, practicing critique is going to help you look at a photo beyond the initial emotional impact.  Third, openly receiving someone’s critique is the quickest way to grow.

Now here’s the last thing I want you to hear: There are certain areas of art that are always pure opinion or a matter of personal style.  I don’t want you to be shattered if someone thinks your image is too dark, but you like dark images.  I like my images bright and sun-drenched, but that doesn’t mean that I can’t adore The Sleeping Willow’s darker, moodier, and whimsical images of her children; we simply have a difference in style.

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Learn to Critique Photos

All of these images are Hannah’s from The Sleeping Willow. They’re so different from my style exhibited above and I adore each of them!

Don’t be shattered when someone comments on something you think is integral to your style. That said, please be humble enough to listen and look for the hint of truth in what they said.

Most of all, I want you to spend these three weeks exploring and having fun.  I can’t wait to see what you love to photograph!

Five Minute Friday: Opportunity

Sedryn’s lying on my chest, wheezing hard, in the dark exam room. What started as what I thought was croup, was ending in what I clearly knew was bronchialitis. That evil RSV virus that inflames airways and makes my babies feel like their drowning in their own lungs.

Opportunity

All three of them have faced this battle.  The girls spent many nights curled up in our beds and signing please at the sight of the nebulizer. Sedryn summons the energy to fight the nebulizer for a bit, but then collapses in a lifeless heap back on my chest.

Opportunity

In the morning, he wakes feeling a little better. He drinks his milk and curls in next to me. I ask him if he wants his back rubbed.  He says “Yah,” with the slightest hint of mischief in his voice. I rub that back and each time I think he’s fallen back asleep and stop rubbing, he wiggles his body to tell me to keep it up. Sweet little stinker.

I only have this opportunity once. Only one moment right now where I can lay him next to me and rub. The same moments already passed with his sweet sisters two years ago (and hopefully they will not need visits with Mr. Nebulizer ever again).

This moment is ordinary. Nothing special. Nothing tragic. Just normal day in and day out mothering. But it’s my only opportunity to live this moment fully. To live all there.

Sedryn, he sleeps 6+ hours each day while sick. The girls ask to do their reading homework. They surprise me with what they’ve retained since my last feeble attempt to read with them. One opportunity to hear them read the words “am” and “me” for the first time. One opportunity to see that excitement.

I don’t want to miss these opportunities.

 Five Minute Friday

God-Sized Dream Life Statement

The laundry lies in heaps and baskets all over the house.  It’s crumpled and rumpled but clean.

God-Sized Dreams

I’m a lot like my laundry, and I have a feeling you might be too. I’m washed clean, forgiven of all my sins, yet I lie rumpled in the mess of the everday.  Somtimes I’m too crippled to do anything at all. I feel like my day to day life is filled with so much sin that I couldn’t possibly be used by Him.

 

Yet, what I’ve learned most in the last year is that God uses me best when I expose those messy rumpled bits of daily life and sin.  The fact of the matter is that I still use my crumpled clean laundry; God still uses my messy-beautiful sin-filled life.

For a little over a month now, I’ve been encouraged in a secret Facebook group of God-sized dreamers. When I applied for this God-sized Dreams Team, I’m pretty sure I wrote my dream as “to photography 12 session in the next year.”

But our facilitator-leader, Holley Gerth, had us dig way deeper from day one.  Holley made us explore our strengths, our skills, and the tug on our hearts for a certain group of people.  That culminated this week in a LIFE statement.

And here mine is.

I believe God has created and called me to reveal to women with photography and words that our most beautiful moments are the messy everyday vulnerable stories.

As you can probably tell, I’ve been doing a lot of reorienting since buying my Quiet Graces domain. I’m trying to streamline things around this central purpose.  Trying to ignore the fears and life a life that follows this purpose by God’s grace alone.

I want to tell you the hard stories about my days. I want to share with you the joy in everyday moments. I want to capture images that speak of beautiful-mess grace. I want to teach you to use your camera to capture those moments, too.

But I think there might be a bit of quiet in this space for a season.  Cautious quiet as I listen to His voice. The type of quiet that is learning to use her own crumpled clean (and dirty) laundry for the glory of God.

Right now, I’ll commit to two maybe three post a week.  My Beginner Photography Class posts on Tuesdays and on Wednesdays I’ll try to post in a way that scares me as I work toward this God sized dream.  There will be a post or two on client sessions as they’re completed on Fridays or funny kid stories as they occur.  And perhaps Multitude Monday posts if I can keep track of my gratitude journal.  But mostly there will be the quiet of a heart seeking Him hard for a season.

A Free Beginner Photography Class

(Note this class is from 2013. Each class lesson is still below but you will not receive any instructor feedback and the Flickr Group is no longer active.)

I’ve had a camera in my hands for the better part of 12 years now.  I was a 16 year old kid chasing around my babysitting charges.  A 17 year old kid spilling chemicals all over the darkroom. An 18 year old kid hand coloring a black and white image.  A 20 something recording those crazy moments on your dorm that bring so much laughter.  A mid 20s mom taking pictures of her kiddos. Free Beginner Photography Class For two years now, I’ve been called to pursue this craft professionally.  I’m not making a whole lot of money right now and, honestly, a lot of my clients are friends and family who are receiving a gift. Money isn’t really what I’m after.  No, my end goal is to have a client laugh over the capture of that one face their their kiddo makes that is so them, to walk into a client’s house and see that frozen in time moment right above the mantle, or to give that mama an album exploding with her whole family while she weeps tears of joy.  Those are the moments that make my soul sing. I love giving the gift of photography to clients and friends. 

Teaching the Craft

When I pause to dream about where this business might go, there’s always a tug on my heart to teach.  To gather a group of friends around me and teach them to capture their own memories. Give a man a photo and they’ll cherish the memory forever.  Teach a man to take photos and they’ll capture memories forever. I’ve tried numerous times to do just this, but in this season of life it’s just hard to do.  Eventually, I’d like to host (or be a part of) one or two day retreats to help new photographers learn their craft, but that time is not now. Yet while participating in  Holley Gerth’s God-Sized Dreams Team and reading her early release of the Do What you Can Plan, I realized that maybe I can slowly move toward this dream.   What if I start compiling my resources now?  What if I invite you, my readers, to explore the craft of photography with me in a free beginner photography class right here through this blog? Free Beginner Photography Class

Would you join me in a Free Beginner Photography Class?

I’ll commit to posting on one topic every Tuesday for the next 52 weeks.  You can stop by as often as you like and soak up as much information as you dare.   I’ll throw in 20 or so large assignments and a mini assignment for each post as we cover the material and host a Flickr Group so we can see your finished projects and chart your growth.  As I watch you grow, I’ll invite some of you to guest post your images and contribute your learning.

What will the Class Cover?

Here’s a brief list of upcoming topics.  As I post in this series, I’ll update this list with a link to each individual post for easy reference.

  1. Assignment #1: Learning to Critique Photos
  2. How Cameras Work
  3. Camera Types
  4. Photography Critique Assignment Link-Up 
  5. Camera ISO and Assignment #2
  6. Shutter Speed and Assignment #3
  7. Apeture and Assignment #4
  8. Depth of Field: Further Study
  9. Camera Light Meters and Metering Modes
  10. Program Mode
  11. White Balance
  12. Introduction to Storytelling with Images
  13. Rule of Thirds
  14. Student Images
  15. Leading Lines
  16. Try a Different Angle
  17. Detail Images
  18. Diptych and Triptych
  19. Lens Type: Zoom or Fixed Focal Length
  20. Lenses: Differences on a Full Frame and Crop Sensor Body
  21. Lenses: Focal Lengths-Wide to Telephoto
  22. 6 Month Student Reviews
  23. Camera Lenses: Recommendations and Buying
  24. Using your Camera in Manual Mode: Exposure Triangle
  25. Photography Exposure Stops
  26. Manual Mode Workflow
  27. Exposure Bracketing
  28. Setting Exposure in Manual Mode: the Zone System
  29. Painting with Light: a lighting overview
  30. Natural Light
  31. Front Lighting
  32. Side Lighting
  33. Back Lighting
  34. Available Light
  35. Modifying Light Part 1: Reflectors and Diffusers
  36. Modifying Light Part 2: On Camera Flash
  37. Portrait Lighting
  38. RAW or JPEG?
  39. Changing your Perspective
  40. Final Assignment and Announcements
  41. Nailing Focus
  42. Editing Software Overview
  43. Basic Editing: Brightness and Contrast
  44. Basic Editing: Magic Histograms with Levels and Curves
  45. Basic Editing: Converting to Black and White
  46. Basic Editing: Layer Masks
  47. Editing a Naturally Dark Image
  48. Final Assignment Due Date and Action/Preset Love
  49. Quick Clean Edits in Lightroom and Photoshop Elements
  50. The Finish Line and My Final Project
  51. Amber’s Final Project
  52. Teddy’s Final Project

Please let me know in the comments below what you’d like to learn over the next 52 weeks and I’ll be sure to include it! I can’t wait to see where this journey will carry us!

14 Months

14 Month Sedryn

Sedryn boy, you are amazing.  I can’t even process how ridiculously fun and adorable you are.  I’ll try, but only because it’s the only way to permanently keep you little.

You’re still not walking.  You can stand for a good 30 seconds, and take a few steps if the mood strikes, but overall you have no desire to walk.  You spend most of your day taking things apart or putting things in small cavities.  I think I have 5 crayons in my window sliding area that will take me over 15 minutes to get out.  Good things it’s winter and I don’t need the windows open.  Your fine motor skills are pretty through the roof because of all this practice.  You seem to prefer your left hand, so I’m wondering if I have a little engineer-brained strangely creative kiddo on my hands.

You might not walk, but you sure do climb… everything.  It’s amazing what you’ll climb.  Today I caught you up on daddy’s computer chair.  There was nothing near the chair so I was astounded.  Later, I watched you try to do it again.  You grasp the spindle on the back of the chair and the front of the seat and use your abs and arms to haul yourself right up.  I’m not sure I have the physical strength for all that! Your look of mischievousness joy just melts my heart when you accomplish a climbing feat.

The other thing that’s curious is your vocabulary.  I’m not sure if this is a second child thing (as in the girls speak to you all day long or momma is better at understanding toddler speak), but I’m floored by what you already say.  Sometimes we have entire conversations!  Today you pointed at pictures on the wall and told me “Der Dadi!!!” (there’s daddy).

Here’s a list (as best as I can compile) of your current vocabulary:

  • All done
  • Socks (gocks)
  • Clock (gock)
  • Up (bup!)
  • Daddy
  • Momma
  • More
  • Car (gar)
  • Sister (ter with a point)
  • No (nuh)
  • Uh oh
  • Cup
  • There (der)
  • Kitty (ditty)
  • Dog (gog)
  • Ball
  • Throw (doe!)
  • Mouth (mow)
  • bird (bud)
  • duck

I’m sure there’s more than I’m forgetting.  Your understood vocabulary is crazy too.  I asked you for a Kiss and Snuggle today and you were all over it in seconds.  Big drooly open mouth kisses right on the mouth and head butting snuggles.  My favorite.

I’m still wishing I could freeze you sweet boy…. But you appear to get more fun each month.