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Photographing a veterinary practice - blog update.

Somewhere...

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You have a stronger stomach than I do.
I managed to get a couple photos past the sheep's head. Then it got too much for me.
What can I say, I'm a wuss... :smile:
BTW, compliments on the project. Good documentary stuff.
 
Excellent photos, mono really brings out the harsh reality of it all.
 
Most interesting, and well done. Excellent photos, and I agree with Alex that monochrome is well suited for the subject.
I too have been spending time at the vet's recently, but not for photography. Must be the silly season for dogs.
 
This is a really excellent series, great to look at indeed. I'm sure the vets will be impressed with this documentary. A few years back we were at a friends place for dinner (he is a vet) when a call came for a farm dog which had impaled itself on a stick. Blood and guts everywhere, but we managed to stitch it up and stabilise it enough to get back to our roast!
Vets do a great job in sometimes appalling conditions, so it's good to see a series like this.
 
I think you need to get closer and make more use of angles and perspective. There's a very same approach to a lot of the photos and I think you need to engage and commit more. The best documentary photography makes you feel as if you're right there, in the scene, immersed, and elevates itself beyond being a photograph.

Obviously sometimes one can't always get close - but it's a give and take. If you're not close enough or immersed enough the feeling of shared space isnt there.

Shared space is important.

As is constructive criticism and feedback - which isn't always free nor is it guaranteed. :smile:
 
Hi Simon, an interesting project following the vets showing life is not like 'All creatures great and small' . It can not be easy documenting the vets at work whilst not getting in their way, others have commented about viewpoints and angles which would be valid comments had this all been set up in a studio, but obviously they are not.
 
Keith, the trick is in being there but not there. Situational awareness is of utmost importance. Respecting but sharing their space. It's all related and no studio should ever be involved.
 
Given the circumstances, I think the photos are very good. I think clayne's idea of shared space would be a challenge indeed, not least because vets tend to have animals' lives as their priority, rather than 'sharing their space' with photographers. That said, I think you could try to develop some characterisation of the workers by shooting them in their breaks, as they arrive and leave work, you may be able to get some nice studies of them outside of their 'vet' role in that way.
 
I found it very interesting and thought it was an excellent idea for a photo series. I'm not sure I agree about poking in closer. You have presented this to us like we were there as observers, and I feel as if I have experienced some of it. To me, that it a quite successful result.
Cheers, Richard
 
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