Alex Benjamin
Subscriber
Never ask for opinions, ask for ideas. That's how you learn.
Took me a few years to make a photo I actually liked. My early photographs were lousy. Know what? That's normal. Asking to make good photos a year after picking up a camera is like asking to write a great symphony a year after learning to read music. Doesn't work that way. Takes time, takes practice, takes taking classes and workshops, takes exchanging ideas with other photographers, takes taking advice from better photographers than you are, takes looking at what other photographers have done.
But mostly takes accepting that you're going to make a lot of bad photos in your life. Especially in the beginning - but not only. Took me a few years to make a photo I actually like, and I still have a lot more misses than hits. Difference is now, with more experience, I can tell why the bad ones are bad and what I should have done to make them better.
Yeah, it's great to post a pic on a website and have people say how good it is. In the long run, it doesn't mean squat. You don't become a good photographer by the praise you get on a website. It's like learning to be a good painter, a good dancer, a good musician, etc.: takes time.
I truly wish I was 19 and had all that time to make bad pictures before I could make good ones.
Took me a few years to make a photo I actually liked. My early photographs were lousy. Know what? That's normal. Asking to make good photos a year after picking up a camera is like asking to write a great symphony a year after learning to read music. Doesn't work that way. Takes time, takes practice, takes taking classes and workshops, takes exchanging ideas with other photographers, takes taking advice from better photographers than you are, takes looking at what other photographers have done.
But mostly takes accepting that you're going to make a lot of bad photos in your life. Especially in the beginning - but not only. Took me a few years to make a photo I actually like, and I still have a lot more misses than hits. Difference is now, with more experience, I can tell why the bad ones are bad and what I should have done to make them better.
Yeah, it's great to post a pic on a website and have people say how good it is. In the long run, it doesn't mean squat. You don't become a good photographer by the praise you get on a website. It's like learning to be a good painter, a good dancer, a good musician, etc.: takes time.
I truly wish I was 19 and had all that time to make bad pictures before I could make good ones.
