Tammie Dooley... her road trips, her blog, her photos, her personality and abbreviated bio. Road Trips ought to be a category of General Discussion or subset of photographers. Maybe that would attract younger, more creative people and women in particular to Photrio.
http://soloroadtrip.com it's fun, browse it.
Yes, road trips are fun. I don't hit the road much any more. Can't afford to take off much time.
Lots of interesting stuff on the road...
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The blue swimming pool is fantastic, this is the work of yours I like the best , these types of images would be spectacular in tri colour gum.
IMO narrative about the photographer's experience distinguishes ROAD TRIPS from TRAVEL (as in locations) and STREET. Road trips typically involve talk the travel experience to and through wherever..
I have seen a lot of your work , and that of Les Krims I think he is from the Buffalo area. I find the surrealistic adaptation of the camera work and post processing is a perfect match to the scenes that you have brought forward. The reason the gum process is that it is permanent, soft palette and something once learned easy and $$ low cost to do.You like the HDR hyper real. I learned it from Les Krims. It is single image HDR, you make 3 exposures in light room and process. Using the lazy an's method of HDR software with jsut one exposure does not yield as good an image. That is the key. Of course, if you have a tripod and can get 3 separate exposures or more that is the best. The pool photo was shot with a little 16mp Oly M43. I used it extensively about a year. But too hard to manually adjust. I'm an old film photog used of easy manual controls. Could never figure the M43 out, used to shoot it on the dummy setting. So had to give it up. Too bad their M43 was not more like their half-frame film cams.
Can't say about tri color gum. But wish I knew how to do tri color carbro prints and autochromes. The carbro prints had a wonder look to them. I'm not much a technician. I am a street photog 1st then a printer / technician / book printer 2nd. (also archivist)
I have seen a lot of your work , and that of Les Krims I think he is from the Buffalo area. I find the surrealistic adaptation of the camera work and post processing is a perfect match to the scenes that you have brought forward. The reason the gum process is that it is permanent, soft palette and something once learned easy and $$ low cost to do.
What do you mean?
Road trips they are very pricey nowadays. The photos I posted above (BW) were shot on a mid-country loop of about 2500 miles. I boondocked the entire trip. (slept in my vehicle) and it still cost over $500 with no motels. When gas prices were near $4 a gallon a few years ago it was really $ to travel. Plus you have to favor in any lost income if you don't get any vacation time.
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Jersey City campsite
Working in NYC for me is always camping out in Jersey City. Can barely afford that. Near $500 a week just for parking a tent + a few hundred for gas and tolls + metro + PATH + food. Close to $800 a week to camp out to shoot. If you are young and don't mind sleeping in the subway or Grand Central you can do it a lot cheaper. A one way bus ticket from Philly to NYC is $11. Crazy how cheap it is to ride the bus!.
I prefer sleeping in my vehicle than a tent. With a tent you have to carry all your gear on your back. At least with a car you can hide some under the seat and trunk. Wherever you put your stuff, the car interior has to have nothing visible or you risk a break in.
Taking a cross county Greyhound Bus may be an interesting photo project. I'm too old and got sleep / back problems, but some young guy should pick it up.
I went on a 26 day road trip with a noblex camera and high hopes , Toronto to LA and back. The photo's I took were pretty pedestrian to say the least and of all the work I do it was the least rewarding. I cannot accept
the concept of going out and looking for photographs, for me I need a concept and long term plan with lots of time and energy to make mistakes.
Trips like these are expensive and IMO not worth the effort... I knew a very rich man who travelled 6 months of the year, and he took hundreds of thousands of very mediocre photos that were known sites but little time to get to know the regions so they all look postcardish.
Road Trip to the American Southwest and Americana. Beside the icon shots and landscapes, I have loads of placement and activity type shots as well as personal, maps, etc. The whole thing went into a 30 minute slide show with music of the area that is shown on my HDTV. It tells a story of the trip. Samples.
One trip - 16 days. We didn't make Valley of the Gods but we found Monument Valley where we stayed two nights very nice. Our room balcony looked out onto the valley. Of course we drove the valley as well. Here are some of those shots and some other places as well.Alan, excellent! One trip? Per your map, you circled around the area we traveled...part of a Jeep group? The place I most recommend is Valley of the Gods, more amazing than Monument Valley and very few tourists. Does your slide show have a script?
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