On the beach in Monterey, there is a ruin. I don't know if it is terribly old or not (by California standards that is!), or reallyeven a ruin, but it is one of the most interesting things on this particular beach. There are all kinds of tempting and tantilizing textures on the salt/water damaged wall. Unfortunately I was there at the wrong time of day to get photos of those textures (without getting wet that is.).
I happened to notice how different each photo I took, looked, depending on what the ocean was doing. A big part of how different this picture looks has to do with what position the waves are in at the moment the shutter snapped.
Each and every picture looks different. Hey! A ship on the horizon.
I began to think about this idea of not having control over what I'm focusing on. I can't tell this subject to smile, or look this way, or to "stay". It isn't up to me, except to be in the moment and let the photo happen that will happen. This is much easier to stomach with digital photo taking of course!
1 comment:
Great little process journey! Thanks for the trip.
I was reading Katie Pasquini-Masopust's book about design and think that some of these photos would make great base for a quilt. If you don't have that book, you should take a look. A good friend of mine gave it to me. ;-)
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