Focus on Photography
Photo of the Week "May Festival Midway & Sunstar" by Bob Crum. Photo data: Canon 7DMII, manual mode, Tamron 16-300mm lens @16mm. Exposure; ISO 1600, aperture f/22, shutter speed 1/250 of a second.
Photo of the Week "May Festival Midway & Sunstar" by Bob Crum. Photo data: Canon 7DMII, manual mode, Tamron 16-300mm lens @16mm. Exposure; ISO 1600, aperture f/22, shutter speed 1/250 of a second.
Never a dull moment!
Bob Crum
Bob Crum

Another fantabulous May Festival is in the books! Photos were shot on Saturday. Better weather brought out the whole town. And from kiddies to grannies, hundreds danced to great music in front of city hall.

The event is an excellent opportunity to practice conscious awareness. However, the moment I witnessed it, my subconscious being aware of being consciously aware invoked confusion. So I just stopped thinking about being consciously aware, and instantly instinct took over. The result: 858 photos from which to select 40 or so. About average when encountering a cornucopia of photo ops.

One problem: Phonetographers! They seem to be multiplying logarithmically—19,483 phonetographers in 2017, 195,259 last year, 1,382,690 this year. An epidemic of ginormous proportions!

If only I got a dollar for every kid who approached me begging: “Hey mister, take my photo”! “Can't, your mother told me not to” usually works. If it doesn't, I threaten to seize their cellphone. That always works because a teenager can't live five minutes without texting!

Carnival photo ops are incredibly challenging. Consider a scene of people in partial shade waiting for deep-fried Twinkies and a game booth with bright lights in the frame. If I expose for the bright lights, people in the shadows are underexposed. If I expose for the people, the bright lights are bright blobs. Wait! My Canon 7DMKII gives me exposure metering mode options. Pressing the WB button gives me the following options: “Evaluative metering”, “Partial metering”, “Spot metering” or “Center-weighted average metering.” In the scene described, I selected center-weighted average metering. Bingo! Still, the exposure is seldom perfect, or what I'd like. However, back home I can tweak the exposure with Lightroom. Ah, the wonders of technology, and strawberry margaritas.

Rides all move at various speeds providing exciting options. At a shutter speed of 1/250th of a second, the result would be a fine but a static photo. However, if I reduce the shutter speed to perhaps 1/20th of a second, the ride will be blurred which is perfect for illustrating motion. Hold on! A slower shutter speed increases the light wreaking exposure havoc. OK, I'll simply decrease the aperture size accordingly. Y'all remember the exposure triangle of ISO, shutter speed and aperture, right? Ah yes, when I can float ISO, mash buttons and twirl camera dials to create a photo, I'm ecstatic! And happy to be legally allowed to have so much fun!

Carnival's formidable challenges make photoing interesting. Never a dull moment. Given the technology of present-day cameras, photographers can create most any photo their mind envisions. However, even advanced cameras can do only so much in “P” mode. “P” means “program” not “professional.” It should be evident that to execute various photographic options, (here it comes) one has to know how to operate their camera effectively. It takes time and determination to master the camera but quite rewarding. Though painless, I'm becoming convinced that this learning curve deters many from relishing the jubilation of creating photos. Photography is about creativity. Turn cellphone on, frame image, push camera button... what's creative about that? Yes, I know many phonetographers are as fond of photography as I am of pickled pigs feet. But it's my job to keep teasing. Furthermore, my toes tingle every time a phonetographer buys a real camera.

Photo of the week: The carnival midway and a sunstar. I enjoy creating sunstars in photos when appropriate. The sunstar was created in camera, not with an add-on in post-processing.

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