As Images Go By

I’m not always that good at picking my best photos in real time. When I take a photo, I usually know what I’m hoping for. In other words, I have pre-visualized something in my mind’s eye. But I don’t really know whether I’ve achieved what I’m hoping for, and I certainly can’t tell from my Nikon D70’s LCD display.

When I copy the results of a shoot, also called a set, from my camera’s memory card onto my hard drive, and then go through the set, sometimes photos stick out for me. In my workflow, I use Adobe Bridge for this part of the process. I try to delete real dogs–images that are out of focus (not on purpose!), and that kind of thing. I go easy on the deleting though, because I know that I’m not always able to be a good editor so close to taking the photo!

Partially, soon after I’ve created a set I think I’m swayed by my intentions when taking the photos. This means that I do pick the obvious choices, and also that some good photos get away.

One mechanism I use to catch the good ones that get away is my screen saver. I have my screen saver set to display random photos from my computer. Sometimes I see something good that way that I missed on the first pass–like this orchid, photographed back in June.

Harold buys most of his digital photo equipment from B&H. Click here for Nikon DSLRs and here for Canon DSLRs. Keep in touch with what Harold is doing! For news, tips, techniques and special offers related to Harold's work and digital photography subscribe to the Harold Davis Photography email newsletter.

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.