I'm being a bachelor this week, so I spent some time going through my old photo files. One of my biggest problems in photography is that I take the photograph with the final result already visualized. If the photo doesn't come out like I expected, I discard it without considering whether it is good, even if it isn't what I planned.
I've always liked this quote, but for some reason, not the photo. I don't remember what I was trying for, but I kind of like this one now. I read a biography of Ansel Adams when I first started getting serious about photography. In the book, there was a story about his first trip to the Grand Canyon. A lesser known photographer said the canyon was his favorite subject. He said he had taken hundreds of exposures on his first trip to the canyon. Adams said he took two. He visualized the shot and then created it, first on location, then in the darkroom. I'm not talented or patient enough to spend time necessary on Photoshop to create art, so I need to look more seriously at creating photographs.
Mount Crested Butte
I took this one a few weeks ago. I never looked twice at it, but Cathy and a couple of other people that saw it on Facebook, liked it. Now, looking at it, I like it a lot. I think I will spend some time this week going through my files and see if there others that I have overlooked. Might need a couple of days. I think I have somewhere around 5,000 photographs on file. Not counting the ones with people in them, Mom.
Potato Processing Plant and Reflection
Monte Vista, Colorado
Old Brazos River Bridge
Near Newcastle, TX