Author Archives: natalieprice

Portraits: Anna’s Shoot

Fine art photography has its place, but very rarely can a photographer avoid people and portrait photography altogether. So I suggest to new photographers that you get out there and start practicing your people skills! As I have begun to get more involved in shooting personal portraits I have seen that there are significant aspects to consider.

1) The person: their likes and dislikes, their comfort level in front of the camera, their humor, their personality, their physical characteristics (sparkling eyes, winning smile, awesome hair – whatever it is about that person that is picturesque and should be highlighted). A natural smile is what I love to capture as a photographer, and often it is so hard to find amidst the “cheese.”

2) The place: I am getting good at calling random people and going to random places to shoot portraits, but there is something to be said about planning out a shoot. Everything from the colors of the walls and the plants to the texture and colors of their clothing. But as an artist, I crave organic creativity as opposed to a canned method of design. So I like to find a solid middle ground between the two.

3) The time and weather: If you show up at a crowded park in the middle of the day, the sun will cast some memorable shadows on the faces of your subjects. Sunrises and sunsets offer the most beautiful and fleeting light, but with the right equipment (and maybe an assistant) you can get a good shot at any time of day. Cloudy days are my favorite – you get diffused lighting (little to no shadows) and a potentially dramatic background in your shots.

 

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#7in7 – Failure?

This was my view out my train window during a delay.

Well the odds couldn’t have been more against me this go around for the 7in7 challenge: I was out of town or on the road for work 5 out of 7 days, and then I lost my voice. But I decided that it doesn’t matter – I will still post the songs I started during the week. The main point of 7in7 is to stimulate the creativity in artists and make them produce work. Who says I can’t do 7in7 during Thanksgiving week? Or a week in December?

The song I’m posting today is called “Worth It” which was inspired by my extra long train ride home last week. But I will admit that unlike the person in the song, I was traveling by train to see my family. My first ever journey by train was a success and I recommend it (although I would give a couple extra hours for connecting trains or flights in case of delays).

Worth It (clickable)

I’m going home, going home on a train.

I don’t care how much time that it takes.

Every hour I waste sitting on those rails,

Will be worth it if I see him again.

I’m packing light – only for a day.

Leaving my guitar back in its case.

I’ve got paper and a pen, and the words here in my soul,

I will write him a song so he’ll know.

I close my eyes, and I can see his face.

I remember the strength in his embrace.

I miss his eyes, and the way his smile draws me in.

I’m on a train just to see him again.

I’m going home, going home on a train.

I don’t care how much time that it takes.

Every hour I waste sitting on those rails,

Will be worth it if I see him again.

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Weddings: A Video

To supplement my post on weddings last week, I’m including a video I made from a wedding I shot last year. Enjoy!

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Tis The Busy Season: #7in7

I caught a couple friends in the middle of songwriting...

Song-writing.

An intimidating and exhilarating idea. And something I always seem to be doing in my “spare” time. Last year I heard about a challenge called “7in7” – challenging all song writers to write seven songs in seven days, starting yesterday. If I had not been attempting to write a novel last November during NANOWRIMO (National Novel Writing Month), I would have joined the 7in7 movement. So when I heard talk of 7in7 again this year, I knew I was all in!

You can read more about 7in7 here: http://aaronivey.com/?p=12644

Search #7in7 on twitter to follow the progress of the participants and hear the 2,000+ new songs this week!

Here’s the link to my first contribution to 7in7: Leaving

Lyrics:

You’re leaving,

And I can’t help but notice

You’ve leaving, me behind.

Must be easy

From your view up in the clouds.

— (chorus)

Do I tell you?

Or leave you clueless?

I’m gonna ask you –

How could you do this?

It’s so hard

To calm my heart,

When all I see’s an empty home.

I know that you don’t

Mean to leave me here, alone.

— (chorus)

This project is intimidating because of the whole write-record-and-publicly-post-a-song thing, oh, and the potential-for-professional-songwriters-to-hear-and-judge-you. I’m finding the exhilaration from the challenge definitely worth overcoming the intimidation – I am struggling alongside over 300 other artists who are putting out raw work regardless of whether or not they feel it’s finished and polished. There is life in a community forcing creativity.

I welcome your comments! And join the #7in7 movement!

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Weddings: Some Observations

Before The Walk

I have been editing the images for a wedding I shot awhile back and I began thinking over the different weddings I have attended and been a part of and how wonderful they are (usually).

Weddings can be boring and they can be fun, but they always seem to bring heightened emotions (which make them all the more interesting to me). The heightened emotions add to the story and make each wedding and each couple unique – regardless of whether they use the same theme colors and location as someone else.

Weddings are also fascinating to me as a photographer, because of all the action happening both onstage and off, before the ceremony and after. There are so many details that often get overlooked, and fleeting emotions that are often forgotten. It is a challenge to develop an eye to catch all the excitement, but it is exhilarating when you succeed!

Another aspect of weddings that intrigues me is the perspectives of the people involved. How does each person view and value the wedding, the couple, the future? When I am the photographer, I usually get the fly-on-the-wall experience and see everyone’s opinions through their attitudes, interactions, and facial expressions.

The biggest, most important part of weddings is the fact that they bring people together. The couple. The family. Their friends. Through the things that go wrong (and there are always things that go wrong), people are brought together.

A couple of my friends got married a while back and I remember they were in that series of weddings where everyone’s color was deep RED. It was early afternoon on a Saturday. The wedding was indoors and the bride and bridesmaids were all barefoot. I brought my boyfriend. A lot of things happened that weren’t planned, including a table falling over on someone and the snacks disappearing too quickly, but I also remember another friend of the couple who decided that he would give them his TV (a nice flat screen), so he just loaded it up and took it to their new place. In the end, the important things happened (they got married, after all), and the rest made their day unique and special.

I know there are a lot of stories that do not have a happy ending, and ties are severed. And maybe that’s why it has become so important for people to document a day of happiness; so that the moment of joy is not forgotten, even if love sours. But I still support weddings and marriage and people working hard to make it happen. I still believe that even when the heart-breaking things happen, love is still worth fighting for. Within love there is so much potential for goodness. And maybe that is why I love being involved with weddings the most, I get to be a part of that potential.

Here’s to weddings, people, and love. May they continue to happen, last, and grow.

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Birth of a Blogger

Morning Walk

After adjusting to seeing browns and tans everywhere I turned in Texas, I was excited to see some GREEN growth on the side of the road. And, as most photographers would do, I took a picture to remember the moment. The moment of hope, the color of life, the milestone of growth in a parched world.

This is also the moment of another kind of growth. Personal growth. I’m entering a big world of intellectual sharing, where ideas and opinions fill countless pages and websites on the Internet, the world of blogging. This blog may never have any readers, but I’m committing to sharing what I have with the world, from the small thoughts to the big truths I learn.

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