
Greetings friends, students, teachers, photographers and all who love photography. Please join me on my quixotic quest to create a photography community in the Chattahoochee Valley. This is my inaugural post-I encourage you to respond and keep the conversation and ideas alive. Let's also meet, in classes, lessons and at exhibit openings. I plan to blog on a wide variety of topics, from tech help for beginners to aesthetic concerns for art photographers and much more. Something for everyone I hope. If not, let me know.
If, like me, you are new to blogging, this link might help:
Keep shootin' and keep in touch,
Kenny
Kenny
11 comments:
Hello Mr. Gray. Welcome to the world of blogging. I'm excited at the opportunity to gain some insight into your world of knowledge. Keep sharing.
I read about this blogspot in the Wall Street Journal Weekend edition. I thought fellow photographers might be interested. They are photographs taken from apartments in NYC of thier window view. Pretty coolio.
http://outmywindownyc.blogspot.com/
Kenny,
This is an excellent idea! The area's photographers need an organized effort to bring us all together ~ and this may be the effort that does it. It is natural and fitting that you would take on this role ~ as a leader, teacher, and mentor in helping others achieve their artistic goals.
Best wishes! I am looking forward to your next installment.
With warm regards,
Jim Henderson, CRNA
www.pbase.com/sandman3
Hello I'm Edward Lamboy from Columbus looking forward to meeting everybody, right now the only question I have is were's The Photography Center located and are they visiting hours. Thank for any info.
Excellent idea. Good luck!
In Columbus,
Steve
Hey Kenny,
I'm really excited to get back into the work of art/photography. I have missed it greatly! Looking forward to seeing you all again soon!
Ally.
www.allysonlouise.com
I am a "dyed in the wool" novice in photograpy. What I don't know could fill a huge book. But I love it and make lots of bad pictures.
I'm looking forward to tips. I was in two of the photography classes EBT center. Your work impresses me greatly.
Diane
Kenny, this is a wonderful idea. I also like the idea that you are linking to other photographers in the area and to your previous students sites. I would like to suggest that for those interested (and who have their own sites) we could give each other critiques of our work...I know I still have much to learn, but would love learning from others. Also, we could plan "meet ups" to photograph, learn and share. If you like the idea and others are interested I'd be glad to organize things.
Kenny, I'm checking your blog once or twice a day. I very much enjoyed seeing John excellent work and would love to talk w/him. His image have a raw quality yet are very chic. Thanks for the forum.
Marsha
I have a question please. I'm going out west is a couple of weeks and I've bought an excellent polarizing filter to use. I will need to open my aperature more to accomodiate this filter, right? Any suggestioins are greatly appreciated. This is the first time I'm going to try working with a filter. I read it's good for desert type landscapes. Suggestions??
Marsha from Eufaula
Marsha, a polarizing filter,is still a very useful accessory in the digital age. A good polarizer will darken blue skies, remove reflections from window glass and the surface of water and make your colors appear more saturated. Very useful, but with drawbacks: on average, you lose 2 stops, but unless you are working in Manual Mode, your camera will compensate and adjuct your exposure. Also, polarizers work best at mid-day when the sun shines brightly.
Have a great trip!
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