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Sometimes, a lousy picture is a great place to start.

By
Industry Observer with ARFCO Media

Sometimes, a lousy picture is a great place to start. One of my favorite channels of creative expression is digital painting. When I'm out and about shooting random pictures with my Blackberry, most of them don't turn out (well as pictures anyway).

A few comments I've received of late are concerned about me driving and taking pictures. Let me assure you my eyes are on the road. I literally just hold up my Blackberry and fire off several pictures hoping I get what I'm glancing at while driving. I'm not looking at what the camera is looking at, my eyes are on the road.

Either that or I'm stuck in traffic and for a moment I'm not moving at all. There's nothing fancy about the Blackberry camera. No f stops or shutter speeds to be concerned about. It's particularly hard at sunrise or sunset while you're moving. The shutter speed automatically wants to be slow because of the low light so any headlights, stop lights, or street lights end up being big bright blurry blobs in the photo.

What I've learned is sometimes a fuzzy dull glazzy looking photo is a great place to start a digital painting. It's a passion of mine and I love the experiment. I have several programs I use and over time I've learned to choreograph a kind of dance between programs as I work with the images. Some turn out, some don't.

I was leaving my office in the Eastlake neighborhood after work. You head south on Boylston to get on Interstate 5. While you're in line waiting for the greenlight I love to take in the fabulous view. You're on the west side of Capitol Hill where the freeway is on tall concrete pillars high above Lake Union.

You get a great view of downtown, south Lake Union, Queen Anne hill, and the Space Needle. I was enjoying that view this past Wednesday and the fact that the days are getting noticeably longer. It was about 5:10 PM and the sun was just setting. As I waited for my green light to get on the freeway I fired off about 30 shots from my camera. Most of them, as it turned out, were great pictures of my passenger seat door, my sunvisor, the dashboard, or black and gray fuzzies with streaks of light.

Ahh... but the last one. I got the sunset and the colors were splendid! What I've come to appreciate is the discovery of how the image is framed. There's a tension that would be very difficult to plan or set up. It just happens. You have to look beyond the raw image to see the possiblities. 

I have a few more up on my picasa site at: Amethyst Cotillion 

The Blackberry Chronicles
ARFCO Media © 2011

Posted by

René Fabre

"Where there's conversation, there's opportunity."

Please Note - The views expressed herein reflect only the individual’s personal views and are not the views of the author’s employer.

The Blackberry Chronicles, a blog by Rene Fabre and his travels around the Greater Pacific Northwest and beyond. Connect w/ Rene Fabre on Google+. Rene Fabre on Twitter. Rene Fabre writes reviews on Yelp. Rene Fabre on Linkedin.com The Audiorium YouTube Channel by Rene Fabre. Facebook.com/renefabre Rene Fabre loves digital photography and here are his shares on Flickr. Rene Fabre is a musician and composer and shares some of his orginal music and recordings on Soundcloud. Rene Fabre shares his interests on Pinterest.
Don MacLean
New England Real Estate Center Inc. - Easton, MA
Realtor-Homes for Sale- Easton, Mass 02356

Well at least you were not starting with a blank canvas lol

Don't feel bad my picture taking needs a lot of work.

Enjoy the day

Jan 21, 2011 02:22 AM
Team Honeycutt
Allen Tate - Concord, NC

I think that is a cool picture and the best thing from it is that it is unusual.

shelton

Jan 21, 2011 03:04 AM
Glenn Roberts
Retired - Seattle, WA

I thought I was the only one that needed to take a "roll" (whatever that is today) of film to get one good picture. Thank goodness we don't have to carry glass plates around with us anymore. BTW...very cool image of sunset in Seattle.

Jan 21, 2011 03:15 AM
Scott Cowan
RE/MAX Professionals - Olympia, WA

Renê-


That's a great photo!  I know you keep one hand on the wheel and the other on the phone while driving that is why I don't get to Seattle all that often =)

 

Please be safe and please continue to share your photos.

Jan 21, 2011 05:35 AM
Rene Fabre
ARFCO Media - Renton, WA
Practicing Philosophical Eclectic of the Arts

Don: And that's key! Not starting with the blank canvas. It's always easier to play with something already on the page. Thanks... And I had a great day in Gig Harbor today... Enjoy the weekend.

Jan 21, 2011 11:27 AM
Rene Fabre
ARFCO Media - Renton, WA
Practicing Philosophical Eclectic of the Arts

Shelton: Thanks... it was a delightful surprise.

Jan 21, 2011 12:20 PM
Rene Fabre
ARFCO Media - Renton, WA
Practicing Philosophical Eclectic of the Arts

Hi Glenn: No kidding, I do remember that... always stressing about those rolls of film and wasting a shot. Now I fire off a hundred or so, pick the 2 that work, and delete the rest... and start over. The image is cool, it was such a cool surprise when I was playing with it and those reds and yellows came through.

Jan 21, 2011 12:35 PM
Rene Fabre
ARFCO Media - Renton, WA
Practicing Philosophical Eclectic of the Arts

Scott: "Oh, that's why!" Thanks for stopping by... I miss you. We haven't chatted for a while. Let's catch up soon. Enjoy the weekend...

Jan 21, 2011 12:36 PM