Tuesday, December 06, 2011

Mike Davis' list of five things in good photos

Mike Davis speaks on photo editing at the Atlanta Photojournalism Seminar.
Creating images that last beyond the day has been Mike’s mission in settings as diverse as National Geographic Magazine and The Albuquerque Tribune, The White House and pdxcross.com
Mike Davis started his presentation giving us his background. As he transitioned into his educational part of the program on how he does photo editing by walking into the audience.

He got right up in a person's face and asked has this changed the presentation for them? You bet it did.

Mike took the time to demonstrate to the group what he means by house a photographer's distance from the subject, not lens choice, makes a big difference on the impact of a photo.

Distance to the subject is one of the five things that make a difference in good photos.

Five things that impact the effectiveness of a photo:
  1. Color
  2. Light
  3. Composition
  4. Moment
  5. Distance to the subject
I talked about the Distance to Subject and how to maximize putting your audience into your photographs using a wide angle lens in an earlier blog. Click here to read it.

(Nikon D3, 14mm, ISO 6400, f/3.2, 1/100) I love how the wide angle puts the viewer inside this little room (closet).
As Mike went through photos and took a photo shoot from all the images down to the 6 - 7 images he would pick for a photo story, the layout was more from how the photos created a mood. He could lay them out chronologically or systematically as most people do, but this is why he is sought out so much.

"Mike Davis is a virtuoso. He can take a pile of photographic notes and chords and arrange them to make a breathtaking score. Back in early 2001, I was struggling to put together a cohesive portfolio from my work…"

– Scott Strazzante, Staff Photographer, Chicago Tribune
Chicago, Illinois
To lay out photos based on the emotions, the photographer will have had to use those five elements to help create a photograph that communicates on a gut level. Mike Davis talks as he is editing photos and puts into words some of his gut reactions to the photos.

This photo is much better "moment" than the one before or after because the person's hand is almost touching the bucket. Once they touched the anticipation element is gone. This was how the edit was going. The difference with Mike is as he eliminates the images from a gut reaction--he can articulate why his gut reacted a certain way.

I love getting up close and pulling the reader in. I also like light, the colors and the moment I caught here.
Mike enjoyed using PhotoMechanic for editing. It is my favorite as well. It doesn't help with editing the individual photos like PhotoShop or Lightroom, but you can easily sort your picks and put identification in photos with this software.

Mike also talked about how he knows photographers takes are a series of photos where the photographer will work the same angle and composition for the right "moment." The moments rise and fall.
You can see how in the series of photos the teacher turns his head and there is one moment that captures the moment better than the rest. This is where we say the photographer is working it. Looking for the "Decisive Moment" where it all comes together.
When you edit your photos look for all five of the elements and how they make a difference in the ones that stand out from the rest.

Shoot enough photos that you have some comparisons to look at and see differences in peoples expressions and body language from one frame to the next.

If you don't see it get someone to look with you through your photos. They don't have to be a pro to see which ones they like better. They may even tell you why or at least acknowledge it is a gut reaction.

No comments: