Sunday 14 November 2010

Everyone should have a pet.

As I was growing up I had, goldfish (one from a fair that lived 14 years), pigeons (they decided to adopt us and stayed for years) and eventually a hamster (a mutant from a genetics engineering lab experiment that went wrong I think - it was 2 or 3 times the size it should have been),... but I always wanted a dog.

Earlier this year we bought Oscar, the Soft Coated Irish Wheaten Terrier. A bundle of fluffy fur, from which occassionally a long thin pink tongue emerges and proceeds to soak your fingers. We had never had a dog before and were nervous that we wouldn't be able to look after him as well as we hoped, that he would wreck the house and that he would terrorise the children. Our youngest is 6 and we worried she was too young for a medium sized dog with enormous fangs and sharp scimiter like claws. But... we needn't have worried, they have become great friends and can often be seen, cuddling in the hall in greeting every morning, mini MacD with her arms out, Oscar on his hind legs resting his head on her shoulder. Neither prepared to let the other one go. This is the sight that greeted me yesterday as she chilled out watching some TV before our slap up weekend breakfast. So long as Oscar thinks he is human I think we should be OK. I'm just concerened that Daughter No.3 starts to think she's a puppy!

It's not a great photograph, it was snapped with a little point and shoot but it IS a great subject and it reminds me to use photography to record memories. It's not always about the art.

So if you are a dog lover, here are a few more images of Oscar Mild, and more importantly for me, a few memories of some happy walks we've had together lately (some of these were taken by daughter number one, she's getting quite good at the togging!).

This is a photography blog however, not just Oscars vanity page, so i should talk a little about pet photography here. The key thing in Pet photography, to my mind, is not so much exposure, focus and composition, (although of course they are important), but rather, character. The character of an animal must come out in a pet image otherwise it;'s just a picture of an animal, rather tahn a family member. With Oscar, these images have shown his love for the outdoors, the exuberance he greets every walk with and his love of water (at least I hope they do), lying on the sofa with daughter No.3, it aslo shows his soft side, that he is comfortable in our family environment and that he is a well adjusted wee pooch. I think that is more important than the slightly dodgy focus and lighting in that shot.

How do you capture all this - the answer lies in getting down to eye level, catching the dog in candid moments doing what he loves best and (in most cases) getting eye contact. Altogether like photographing humans really!

Saturday 13 November 2010

Quoting Success

It's been a successful few weeks. First of all I won the "Photo of the Month" at one of the biggest Scotland focussed online forums (Scotland by the Roadside) , next I received a request from my employer to use one of my images on their internal literature (Lubnaig Reflections) (alas, unpaid) and then I got my first critique back from my NYIP correspondence course and was told that I had been given a merit award for my echinacea flower image - an honour that is only given to less than one in one thousand course work submissions. I was pleased with some of the images I made this month and posted them on my website (PhotoForMyWall.com) which has experienced a 40% growth in traffic this month.

Now none of this sound momentous, but it doesn't have to be. I am trying to build momentum through small successes hoping this will lead to greater things. The learned 18th century dramatist and politician, Joseph Addison, who contributed to the direction of the Tatler and the Spectator periodicals, once said "If you wish success in life, make perseverance your bosom friend, experience your wise counsellor, caution your elder brother, and hope your guardian genius". In other words keep trying, learn from experience and believe in yourself. Trying to make a name for yourself in an artistic field, especially one so over subscribed as photography, requires great self-belief and perseverance. To be a success you need to be happy with your own work but you also have to bend to the dictates of fashion and ensure others are admire your work on their own terms.

Above all, you need to get your work out there and be seen. There are many great photographers who's images are stored on hard drives or in cupboards and equally there are many very successful photographers whose images remain average but grace the pages of magazines that each and every one of us reads regularly. These photographers are the guys with a name, the editors "go-to guy", the guy with a reputation for reliability even if not for flair. As Woody Allan said "Eighty percent of success is showing up." and he wasn't wrong. If you consider that a big chunk of photographic success comes down to luck (either in being in the right place at the right time to make the image, or in getting your work noticed by the right people), that only leaves a tiny percentage to attribute success to talent and skill. So my take on this is that you need to put your work forward all the time to satisfy Woody, and pitch it in the right way to give Lady Luck a hand. I may or may not have talent and skill, depending on your perception, but I'll have a damn good try at getting what I have got, noticed.

But these minor triumphs are not enough, after all American author Christian Nestell Bovee stated that "Small successes suffice for small souls" and while it sounds harsh, it's a valuable lesson. If you want to be great at what you do, you need to aim high. So my next steps are what? I continue to enter as many competitions as I can, to learn from the masters and to promote my work in the hope that those with similar tastes stumble across it. The other day I had the pleasure of chatting with Peter Paterson FRPS EFIAP MPAGB ie a very qualified gentleman and picked his brains on aspects of photography that have had me stumped for while. For the second time in a year I was told by a luminarie that my basic technique is essentially the same as theirs, but the minor differences in technique are where their quality really shines through. I continue to learn from them. To treat each failure as an opportunity for learning and growing and each success, as an opportunity for learning and growing.

So, having gained my successes in the last few weeks, I keep in mind that "Success is full of promise till a man gets it; and then it is last year's nest from which the birds have flown." - Henry Ward Beecher (politician, clergyman, social reformer and abolitionist) and I keep my eyes open for the next success to build upon the last one. Which leads me to my final quote, reminding us of the importance of taking one step at a time and enjoying the journey. While it is unattributed, it is as valid as these others, "Do not let big ambitions overshadow small successes."