yes! we use the title of this video as an argument / response to so many people who feel inferior in photography because they don’t have the latest and greatest. love it.
Don't forget all the people who feel superior because they own the latest gear... I've been shamed on forums for using a Nikon D3300 and manual focus without anyone dare looking at my work hey
Mike, he never said you don't need to upgrade ever; he said to use what you have on hands and shoot! I'm a pro and just now I am finally gonna get a D610 and I've been shooting with, believe it or not... a D3300... on assignment. Oh yes. Never feel the need to upgrade until now.
"The fact is the relatively few photographers ever master their medium. Instead they allow the medium to master them and go on and endless squirrel cage chase from new lens to paper to new developer to gadget, never staying with one piece of equipment long enough to learn its full capacities, becoming lost in a maze of technical information that is of little or no use since they don't know what to do with it." Edward Weston
For the past 6 years or so, photography for me has been an escape, to use as a form of expression. I am aware there are photographers who are far more advanced in photography than I and there is plenty for me to learn from. However, because of a limited budget and little equipment (just my camera and her two lens), I try to make do with what I have. The quote you shared is quite comforting. Thank you.
How would you possibly know what 3 films and which 2 or 3 lenses to focus on for years to master, if you didn't try 25 other ones earlier on to figure out which ones you liked the most to be worth mastering? You HAVE to start broad. Or I guess you don't "have" to, but it's dumb not to. Does that delay mastery? Yes, but so? Of course most people don't master anything, but if you spent 5 years mastering some random thing you first started with, your mastery would have been a waste of time when it turns out you actually much prefer this whole other setup that you don't discover at all until year 6. Now it took you 5 more years...
This is a great topic, for Christmas my father gave me a 1973 set of time life photography books that he got at a thrift store, and flipping through them I kept saying to myself that these great photos (many of which I find very inspiring and beautiful ) weren't always sharp, had a lot of grain, and poor IQ by today's standards. It really struck me that none of these would fly in a photo feedback group on Facebook where you get pixel peeped to death today, yet they were timeless and beautiful. Great video
That sounds so nice. Some of my photography was rejected by a company's software, because the machine claimed that they were blurry. I just deleted all of my work from their site. Nothing should be perfect, because photography is like painting. There will be blurs, and imperfections. That's why I love photography. Nothing looks real. Most images look like paintings. I never see them as real life.😊
Someone once told me: "The best camera that exist is the one in your hand." This simple statement propelled me more than I could've ever imagined, because it let me take more photos and videos, which in turn gave me better photographic skills! Greetings from South Africa!
Thats exactly why i decided to buy a small camera. Budget wise a cheap big one instead would have been possible too at that point but the chance that i would carry the small one around was just so much bigger.
I took a college photography class back in the 70's (showing my age here) and the instructor told all the rich kids to put away their fancy gear; we were all going to use 2 disposable cameras for all assignments for the class. It leveled the playing field but more importantly, it made you think about how to work around your limitations. It was a good exercise in creativity and problem solving. I loved the class. Thanks for bringing up that the product is what matters most.
I needed this! I started my photography journey about a year ago by purchasing my first DSLR. I did bit of research and ended up going with what I determined to be the best APSC I could afford. A year later, after many more hours of research, I'm feeling the pressure to drop thousands on a full frame. As a rememdy, I decided to picked up my dad's old 35mm and have begun experimenting with film just to practice the basics. It feels good to pare down. Thanks!
I’ve been a painting contractor for over 24 years. Better equipment helps me reach my goal faster and easier. But I have seen my competition come and go over the years thinking all they need is the same airless paint sprayer I own and a license. In the end, hard work, attention to detail, and attention to my customers is what lasts.
I love camera equipment. I lust after new technology. I have a Hasselblad, a Leica, and now a Sony a7riii. However, I know many photographers who with a pinhole camera made from a shoebox can take better pictures than I can with all my equipment. I take average photos and sometimes good ones but I'm not Ansel Adams, Gordon Parks, Dorothea Lange, etc regardless of my equipment. They have artistic gifts. I'm a technical guy and I enjoy cameras much from that angle. I work at getting better artistically. I feel good about both aspects but I don't confuse one for the other. Cameras don't take pictures, people do.
It's videos like this one that make me proud to call myself your friend :) Really outstanding video. Time to go share this in all my social media circles.
Your comments always invigorate and energize me to be better without regard for the tools available to me. As an amateur photographer, I can’t afford all of the wildly advertised equipment. You remind me that it’s about my ability to improve my skills and storytelling. Thank you sharing your passion!
I needed this to quieten the noise of distraction coming from the advertisements and rhetoric that tempts the insecurity in us which thinks we and what we have is not enough. We are enough and what we have is enough, it was and always will be enough. Thank you for this video and I hope it helps quieten the noise for others :)
My cousin is a photographer but my understanding of composition comes from playing guitar over the last 50 years. As I have gotten into photography this last year I recognize so many similarities between the two and am glad for my musical background with the voicing of varied instruments, compositional themes, spacial representation, chord harmony or even the use of dissonance for expression. Again the same thing you are expressing. The cheapest guitar can sound amazing in the hands of an accomplished musician. In fact I cherish some guitars not by cost but by the fact that they are so cheaply made you can easily bend the neck for wah wah sounds or get a more twangy sound which allows for some pretty good impressionistic results. They say beauty is in the eye of the beholder, which is true, but no less assuredly seen through the lens of the photographer.
The best gear decisions I have ever made are 1) Stop worrying about gear 2) Invest in good glass and 3) it's all about the light (and shadows)and how I see the world anyway. Ted, your reasoned voice of experience (backed up by practical hands-on experience of all sorts of cameras, exposure to the work of some of the greatest photographers (living or dead) plus you considerable knowledge of the emotional impact of art on the human spirit, makes this a must watch for any photographer. It comes with the added bonus of helping people to save money (before they get too deep into gear acquisition syndrome that is). Best wishes Stephen
You are my hero! It's all true. I started to take photos with an old Canon AE1 from my grandpa. For me it's not important what gear you own...the only fact that matters for me is "How much do you love this" You Sir, are a great inspiration for me and so many people! Let me say "THANK YOU!" Best regards from Germany
I love your viewpoint. I HATE when people say "if you don't have the best gear you are not a professional." Photography is ALL about the art as you stated. I look at the end product of the image. Personally for me I don't care what gear someone shot with, I care about what the image is and what it speaks to me with. I loved that you talked about this. We all get too wrapped up into the latest and greatest and forget that true art comes from within the artist!
I agree. I started in the news photo business in 1975 and have never been an equipment guy. Give me something that works and let me do my job. In those days you learned to see the exposure, set your camera and preset the focus in case something happened. Today I've grown soft... I LOVE auto focus and use it most of the time. However, knowing how to do without the auto features makes life easier when they are fooled by events. Love your videos. Great job.
A. Adams spent hours and hours not only setting up, composing and shooting but just as much time if not more in the dark room. He was the master printer.
@@kieranl5249 Richard is rightly pointing out that printing was as part of Adams as taking the photographs. I’m sure that Richard and yourself spend hours in front of Photoshop. Photoshop is the electronic darkroom.
What I love about photography is the fact that I can show people what I saw & felt in a given moment or scene. The gear is only there to help capture said moment or scene, it will never convey the emotions. The image does the talking!! Thanks again for this, I was struggling with gear addiction a bit these couple of weeks, now all I want is grab my camera and shoot!!! Thanks!!!
In over forty years of photography, I have used everything from cheapo P&S film and digital cameras, a Nikon FM, various iPhones, a Sony RX100M5 and two versions of Canon 5D's. I've produced wonderful art with each of them and each taught me something that moved my work forward. But, it's been the 5D's that carry the heavy load of professional work and my best art photography. Like you said, you use the tool to achieve the desired outcome. My cheapo P&S images have sold for as much as my Canon 5DS images, but I would never show up at a sports event with just an iPhone. P.S. so glad I discovered "The Art of Photography". When I'm not shooting, I'm studying to advance my skills and your channel is a treasure trove of information, thanks.
Truer words have never been spoken !!! The biggest insult I ever received on one of my landscape photos was " I love this picture, you must have a nice camera"
Great way to get the conversation going about the issue! I once had an MFA photo instructor say “gear doesn’t matter, till it does matter”. Or, in other words, the toys don’t matter till they get in the way of the vision. Yes, content matters most. But photographers need tools that can deliver on their vision. And because the tools are better, we can now dream bigger. So, gear doesn’t matter. Till it does matter.
One of the things that got me hooked on your channel is how you remind us of this & you show us what cameras are barebones that still make awsome photography.
The more videos I see on TH-cam and the churlish, often vitriolic, arguments you see about gear the more I realise too many people are missing the point. It’s not only for the art, it’s also about the enjoyment. Of course the image that matters when talking about the art, it’s all about that finished product that makes people stop and really look. Josef Koudelka must have one of the greatest returns in equipment to amazing image ratios. However, for many of us it’s also the joy of taking an image that makes us proud and we are happy to show others. Here equipment really doesn’t matter at all, despite what many commenters on gear videos say, it’s all about a light catching box you are happy to use and gets you taking photographs. Type, medium, size, age or colour don’t matter at all except to the person making the image, their comfort with their kit and the fact it gets them out shooting on a regular basis does. It’s about wanting to perfect your craft and not appeasing people who think they have a right to tell you what you should spend your own money on, and insult you if you make a different choice than theirs. Photography should be all about wanting to make images not bragging about having the latest, biggest or fastest camera.
Welcome back! As much as the channel has grown and you keep raising the bar with the quality of or your content. It’s this type of insightful monologues that I always add to my favorites to for inspiration.
"Use what you've got, do something with it, and develop that voice." My sentiments exactly. I have seen people with thousands of dollars of photography equipment consistently make boring images they could have made with a point-and-shoot. I have also seen people with a point-and-shoot make engaging images that made me want to see more of their work. Know the limitations of whatever gear you are using and learn to use that gear to express your artistic vision.
Dude, it’s so necessary to say those things from time to time as a lot of folks get all lost camera reviews and pixel peeping, which is an IT dark art in itself and as you say more or less unrelated to the art of photography.. Hope a comment and a like is sufficient currency. I think you spend a great effort here and deserve recognition. At least I pay for TH-cam and appreciate that you keep the ads at bay. Thanks for the show. It’s really educational for the enthusiast. Cheers from submerged continent! Max
Right! I wouldn't sign a painting with a fan brush, but I might flip the brush around and scratch my name in the wet paint with the pointy end. Like you could flip a lens around to shoot macro.
Bravo. Very well said! You could not have named your channel any better because you truly are about the ART of photography. I bought a DSLR camera a little over a year ago. I probably don't shoot as much as a ought to, but you do inspire me to do more. My first camera was a K1000 that I got in 1981. I am so thankful that was the camera I cut my teeth on. I've been struggling with the ability to shoot hundreds of shots over a period of time. I think the digital element is just too fast for me at this point. I'm going to slow down and go back to more of a manual mode and see how that works out. Focusing on the basics and composition. Keep up the great work!
Episodes like this are your bread and butter and why I hold this channel in high regard. I was just having a conversation about working with limitations and how they tend to bring more creativity and energy to a project. They also help you to understand the equipment in an intimate way so when you do invest in something new you know what features you're looking for and why they're important to you as an artist. Many amazing artists pushed hard against the limitations of the medium and we're kind of spoiled beneficiaries of their dedication. We have no excuses.
This is what I like best about your channel. Well reasoned insight and expression about what photography is, how it evolves and yet stays the same. Photography is about feeling, not technology. Thank You.
From a gearhead, everything you said was spot on. I believe when people say things like you will get laughed out of a wedding for trying to shoot it with an iPhone (deeper pixels, or not) are missing the point. It may not look professional, but it can certainly get similar results in the hands or the right person. The secret is to get it right in camera.(my photography instructor would be proud) Whatever that camera may be.
Man, did you hit the nail on the head. Amen to everything you said. I have tried many cameras, lenses and tricks but I found out that, although I can take some fair shots, I will never be a great photographer. A good, great, photographer can tell a story and get a shot using whatever is at his disposal. He can capture the "IMAGE". Great discussion as always, hats off to you.
WOWWWW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!, Now that's what I call an Inspiration!!!!. I just stumbled upon the Title of the Video and I'm glad I watched. Huge respect for you sir. It doesn't matter what Camera you use, It your skill that changes a bad photo to an awesome one..... THANK YOU
I will take it one step further. My photo professor back in the 1970s. Had the class buy a cheap plastic, preset camera. Set shutter,aperture,ect. We had to go out and find the right conditions,on the right day. To match the camera settings. To get a very good exposure. So,off we go with light meter in hand. It was one of the best lesions i learned about LIGHT. Thanks for your videos. I watch them all the time.
This kind of content is why I really love you channel Ted. It's really important to work with what you've instead tossing it away for something shiny. Thanks for sharing you thoughts and all you've done through this channel all these years.
As a bird photographer my equipment is very important to me. However, it is not everything. You don't need the latest and the greatest to get fantastic images. The most important thing is to know and understand your subject.
It far easier to talk about the tools than to teach someone how to "see" and use whatever tool they have to communicate what they want to about what they see. How to communicate what I see is my biggest challenge. Thanks for talking about this topic. Hugely valuable.
*Bravo! Well said, Ted!!* Art is "conversation", so regardless of medium, "art" is the conveyance of an idea/concept from one person to another (or a thought for oneself). Tools are important, but if nothing is conveyed, then the tools weren't as important as one might have initially thought. *Keep up the great work!*
Rock what ya got!! We can be creative with whatever we have. Our most important tool that we have is our mind/creativity. A couple years back I asked a question about fixing my images in a photography group and the first thing most of the members jumped on was my gear. I did get new (used) gear, and I love it, but I realize now that I could've taken very similar images with the gear I had. I also realize now that what I was asking in the group was more of an artistic question. All the best gear can still equate to uninspiring imagery. I want to inspire and be inspired by art. I'm so glad to have found others, like your channel and Brooke Shaden, that helped me to see that I wasn't alone in that.
The things you say in this video are spot on. We all love to get nerdy over the tech. But, bottom line-we need to create the material. When the material is viewed, hopefully it tells it's story the way we want. It is understood. Communicates in some way! I've used media created on different devices including cell phones. I prefer the material being a nicer quality...but..no one noticed..except us..those involved in the craft. Get the shot, roll the video, don't let the moment go. We can be our nerd selves and enjoy our tech talk..but we can NEVER forget..the light is never the same twice! Get the shot! Thanks for this video and what you said! It was great!
Absolutely correct! It's not the gear, but the translation of the vision of the photographer that matters. That does require the photographer to have a vision, for starters.
oh wow! I'm so happy to see you are still doing these videos! I started watching your show waaaaaaay back when you first started. I used to download your episodes on iTunes. So much has happened since then and now I see you're still at it! So happy for you my dude!
Great words of motivation, Sir! I often find watching your videos for just once is not enough to completely understand your views and teachings. It needs repeated views in order to perfectly internalise them.
Whenever I hear some people, vlogger specially, about eye this, eye that, I go back to my Nikon FM-10 or Canon AL-1 and just remember how to turn the dial, select focus and press the bottom. Maybe is because we do not take the time to frame and compose like before?? I took an 8 days vacation and brough home over 1500 images, I remember in summer of 2000 I did my 2nd Euro trip and came back with 20 - 25 rolls of film and I was in several countries so.... back them they were many many pictures!! PS whenever I see one of your videos, I must stop doing everything since I need to focus on all the words and images you put together in your message, a LOT of STUFF to think, analyze!! THANK YOU!!! You beyond the “5 star ratings” for the “new camera” videos, and that is why I like this channel so much! Sincerely, from Mexico, Dámaso!
This is so true. I know a lot of people wishing that they had the latest and greatest camera to take a great photo. I always show them old black and white photos of Ansel and ask "Is this a good image?". After they say yes I tell them that it was shot in film, almost a hundred years ago. Cameras are tools that we use to tell stories. Capturing that story or moment takes more importance than having 5 more megapixels or having the latest AF system.
Well said Ted! Currently, the past few years I've been drawn back to analogue photography with my 4x5 camera and enjoy creating my own images from film to print. In doing so, I've noticed now, more than ever, I spend more of my time planning how to create my image and learn from my mistakes. It is quite time-consuming but I have come to fully appreciate the extraordinary artistic vision of Ansel Adams as well as many others in this field in the perfection of images as art.
Great video Ted. An important conversation for sure. I recently needed to sell my professional camera and lights, and since have been taking my photographs with my iPhone and some film camera’s. It’s been a few months now and feel getting the same fulfillment shooting as I was with my DSLR. I’m also shooting differently as 100% manual film cameras force me to to slow down. I appreciate that. I tell my students all the time, the camera isn’t really what makes a great photograph - it’s the light, composition, and most importantly what you’re communicating. Thanks for another thought provoking video Ted!
Amen. Thanks for the kick in the butt; I needed it. I learned photography in the late 60's on my Grandfather's pre WW II Rolleicord Twin Lens Reflex. The focus lens was out of adjustment so I had to scale focus it, still got some good images. And here I am agonizing over what to take on my upcoming summer trip as if it's going to matter.
Absolutely correct I remember when I started in photography I was told you can tell an amateur photographer from a professional, as the amateur will show you his gear while a professional will show you his portfolio.
Very thoughtful, as usual. Call me, "old-school" or whatever. I'm not into HDR photography, psychedelic, super saturated images that look more like graphic design than photography (to my eyes), or unrealistically 'clean' night images. I'm a HUGE fan of those old Nat Geo images from the 1970's, 80's, and 90's. I shoot digitally, but I LOVE that old, film look, imperfections, limitations, and all.
I also love the style that comes with the emphasis on getting the shot rather than all the technical nonsense. Great photojournalism and wildlife photography is often the stuff you remember the longest and the most fondly. If the photogs has obsessed with the things people on Instagram obsess over, they'd never have gotten the shot!
HDR has nothing to do with modern gear, there's not any HDR-only camera I've ever heard of, unless you count an iphone as a camera. It's just a style some people use. A modern mirrorless camera can take a better black and white classic zone photo than the Nat Geo guys could, as well. It can take a better anything in any style. It will also get the shot more often, because the controls are all better thought out and faster and more customizable etc. than old cameras from the 70s too. And the specs are broader (faster shutter speeds, faster sync speeds, image stabilization now you can take shots in low light that the 70s guys would have had to pack up and leave in, etc)
Great points. What specific guitar model did Jimi Hendrix use? Or for that matter what specific mixer or microphone was used for the recording for Purple Haze? Technology is important, but it is less important than what you play, or shoot, or draw, or paint.
Trust me - lots of guitar nerds know those answers. But you're right - there's lots of guitarists who played strats, but Hendrix was one of a kind. He had something to communicate.
Well... the Stratocaster was essential to his sound back then, but now there are a bunch of copy cat guitars, so it doesn't matter as much anymore :p (I get your point though; not arguing with you)
All I can say is, You're kidding right? You just provided an excellent example of why quality of camera gear is important and if you've never dealt with sound I guess you just wouldn't understand. It's not your fault but pick another comparison. Let's say you wanted to make peanut butter, all you need to make a good peanut butter is peanuts (good peanuts grown in rich soil and picked at the optimum ripening time and gently roasted to perfection) and then take a hammer and smash them to a pulp or put them in your mouth and chew them until they are mushy....get my point.
Great video. To me the most Important thing is that the camera, the tool, doesn’t get in the way of creativity, the screwdriver doesn’t need to be the newest one around, it needs to fit in your hand.
Pretty hard to match a 8x10 b&w contact print even with the latest gear. Same can be said about a dye transfer print from a large negative. There is some great tech out atm but it doesn't quite match the old ways yet imo.
I really like the points you make here. I watch you videos because you focus on the craft. That is what is missed by so many. although we all love to talk about the gear, it’s your voice as an artist that really counts. Keep up content that focuses on the art!
Thank you Ted for this video. I was getting concerned how much of your recent work has become much like other channels (focusing on gear). Not that there's anything wrong with that, but a good balance between gear and photographer analysis is what makes your channel different from others. Thank you again for reminding me what drew me to your channel in the first place. Side point: I learned THE MOST from you and your channel (your composition playlist for example is my gold standard for beginner photography basics)
It’s the same this with musical instruments. People chase the gear used by their idols, but it doesn’t improve their abilities. Very cool perspective on the history of photography vs. modern tools!
Hats off Ted, it’s always been my philosophy to. I think the problem with photographers and photography is more deeply rooted. What is photography (or what is it not)? The many who will try to make a statement that photography is an art will most possibly be the one who like to expose their gear - as if a greater gear makes a better artist. If you dare disagree with these people, they will let you know. Thus a great majority - who thinks like you and me - generally stay silent. (And what’s worst, the many I know who have very sophisticated gear, limit themselves to using very few options that their camera has to offer. There was a time when we had cheap camera but try to make the most out of it in any way we could think of). Others will just say that photography is by no means an art - mainly because they don’t know all the labor that’s generally needed to create expressive images: knowing your camera, knowing how to process (or not) your image, and knowing what you’re doing and what it is you’re trying to say when you trigger your camera. For few it’s easy, for many it takes years to achieve. I like to compare photography to another art form like writing. Everybody writes: Some just fill in the blanks in their Internal Revenue form, others like to comments on social media, others write newspaper articles and other write books and novels, etc. And yet not everybody is a WRITER. But such is not the case in photography: Everybody is a Photographer - mainly because many do not qualify photography as an Art. In fact, they are just saying I WRITE - I TAKE PHOTOGRAPHS. It’s when someone becomes conscious that this media can be as expressive as any other art forms that one will value it like so. And that’s what it’s all about. It’s not about the people who own the best gear and it’s not about the one who owns the worst gear either. It’s about the end product, the end results. Ask me what I would like for Christmas: A state of the art high-end camera or a greater ability to better express my art through this media? Guess what my answer is!
I catch myself gushing over the a7III as if some of my favorite shots I’ve taken couldn’t have come from a t5i, the first DSLR I ever owned. Fantastic video that constantly pulls us back to earth, and back to the art. Thanks, Ted!
I agree with everything you've said. I started photography 2 years ago on a humble Canon T5i and pushed it past what "pro photographers" told me would be possible. I did portraits, astro, real estate, and even weddings with it. I was happy with the work I produced on that camera and my clients were too. I upgraded to an A7III a couple of weeks ago and there is really no huge improvement in my photography. The only difference its actually made is allowing me shoot more easily in more situations. When I do real estate, I no longer need to set up a tripod for every shot, sometimes I can push the ISO a little higher and get the job done. On weddings I don't need to be as mindful of timing a candid shot, I can hold the button and I'm not limited by the burst. I can shoot wider for portraits and crop in to get the composition the way I visioned without losing too much image quality Expensive gear makes a difference in terms of quality of life, not necessarily quality of the photography.
I am in a MA program and took a special topics class on photography. We were assigned a photo project and I came up with photographing trees that had grown to maturity with a fence right in the middle of them. I photographed them close up in high contrast black and white with the camera tool in Lightroom on an iPhone 6. I don't own a digital camera... I have an iPhone. I've shown this series to other classmates since then and several thought I shot the pictures in film. They marvel at the quality of them from an older iPhone. I tell that story to make this point- It really doesn't matter what camera you have in your hand. You can spend as much money as you want but it won't make you a better photographer.
I love this! I've been shooting professionally since 1995 living in L.A and now Phoenix.. Shooting everything from commercial, to fine art, to weddings and really loving all of it. I've owned nearly all of the important cameras (Hassy, Nikon, Canon, Mamiya, Linhof...) film, digital, polaroid. I went through the "oh! if I get the latest this, that or the other thing, how it will inspire me to be a better artist" thing. I am at times still inspired by a new piece of gear (right now it's my Fuji X Pro3) A good deal of that is true. I have a museum of cameras for this reason (including the Diane... the Holga and some other nearly nameless crap). Then... I watch documentaries of Henri Cartier-Bresson, Richard Avedon, Herb Ritts... etc... and you see that they experimented almost zero with gear. One or two cameras... maybe two or three lenses. Arresting photos CAN be shot with cell phones, and I actually believe one COULD find a buying audience for that work IF the work is truly arresting, beautiful to look at. Almost any cell phone now can make prints in line with a nice, intimate contact print. Not that I personally shoot with my cell phone, but reiterate that, as you said, it's the man and not the machine. Honestly, I don't think we could be living in a better time for creating beautiful photographic art.
1000% agree with this. This is amazing. I love your videos. Always a msg for us in your videos. There were times when I did too felt burnt out and just simply blamed my gear. Got back a few weeks later, never been more happy since. Thanks a lot for this videos
It's highly useful observation that despite the modern-day photographers having all the technology at their disposal, they are yet to come up with 'remarkable' work like the Masters' Photography. It offers a lot optimism to us to make best of what we have than just regretting not having enough. : Sandeep Datta, India
Pretty much everything comes down to one: education! When I was in university I was all about gears, but I took a course in art history about photography. Man oh man how much it had changed me. It literally turned me from a camera consumer to at least think like a print making artist. I see a scene, I know what I want as a print, then it’s the matter of how to fill the steps in between.
Yep- If you have ever read the details on his technique you will find that his equipment created so much flare that he had to modify his exposures to compensate for it. I am very grateful to have studied his techniques, taught his methods and meet him in person. Thanks for sharing your experience and knowledge.
Spot on! Couldn’t agree more. Older cameras require more thought and process to use. Mamiya 67, Hasselblad or a 5x4. My first camera a Pentax ME super. Manual tactile cameras to use. The only thing modern cameras have over old is speed. Speed to ‘wind to next frame’ speed to focus, speed to work out exposure etc. What makes the image is the photographer vision. We get lost in tech way to easily. My folks are artists. Some brushes cost them over £100 but it’s for the quality of the brush not because it paints a better painting. They do that with their skill. For me it’s more important that I have a camera I find friendly to hold and is a bond. To that I’ve not long bought a FujibX-Pro1. 6 yrs old and it’s clunky compared to my Nikon but I love it. It’s bought back the joy of taking a picture. In a similar way that my old Mamyia 67 or 330f did. It’s a friend, a pet in s way.
Love this episode. Anything to bring attention to the roots of photography is a great subject. I constantly hear people complaining about NOISE or as us old school photographers equate to as grain. It was such a beautiful thing in film that I still appreciate on some digital cameras such as Fuji. I would love to see you create a video that helps bring back the focus to this and all these beautiful aspects that are slowly dying in photography. I know many of your episodes do this already (I haven’t seen them all). Great episode by the way!!!
i can't even imagine why there are people giving this a thumbs down... though, its not to say the gear doesn't matter, it affects to a certain degree but its not the be all. great video and great message
I agree with you. We get caught up always wanting the latest and greatest equipment. That’s why I’m finding myself leaning more towards film photography.
Thanks Ted, it's like you say, a camera is a tool to get a job done. At its most basic level its a machine that will describe the environment in front of it, the photograph is made by the person operating the machine, and their desire to communicate what they're seeing, which will be informed by their collective experiences and knowledge. I know when I studied the work of other photographers, it changed how I think about it myself, for example I love the work of Joel Meyerowitz, I'm not a street photographer myself but studying him and the way he builds narrative into his shots changes the way I think when I compose my own work, and its at this point the camera is just a tool, its features are irrelevant beyond that of being able to focus and expose light onto some kind of media. There is nothing wrong with having a camera with all the bells and whistles, but it won't improve the photographers ability to chose a subject, frame it and build a narrative into the image that will communicate with an audience. It might help you expose and focus quicker, but those are technical functions of photography which you'd expect to be in the realm of the machine, the ability to connect with a viewer and communicate a message or evoke an emotion, that's in the realm of the squidgy fleshy thing operating the machine. So I agree with you in the point that you were trying to make, which is that it's the knowledge that should be transferable to any camera that makes a good photographer, not the camera itself.
Thank you. I've shot all my life, broke my back, literally, and had to lay off for a while. At 71 young I've given my digital stuff away and have gone back to using just my large format cameras. Even using my great uncle's 8x10 Rochester's. It's a challenge for me, but I'm selfish. I shoot for myself. Now when they make shooting a LF camera a Pra-Olympic event, we'll then......
Thanks Ted. I totally agree 100%. The equipment is only a means to an end. That end is our expression through the gift of photography. Sometimes an expensive camera and equipment is involved but at other times it is an inexpensive camera, like a Holga or Camera phone. The main ingredient should be the image maker. It starts out with the Artist, their gear and then it goes to post processing, be it Photoshop, Lightroom, software of choice or the dark room. Great video.
If Ansel Adams were alive and shooting in color with our camera's today, would his photographs mingle in with the same talent level of hundreds of photographers on Instagram? His skill level was top notch and incredible in his time, and would be with today's cameras as well, but he'd be in the company of many others. I'm just wondering if he would have stood out as much?
I agree 100%. Looking back at his photos - they are ok (definitely great during his time). IMHO, the level of creative skill COMBINED with the latest technology has far surpassed what Ansel has done. I even look back at old National Geographic photos from 20+ years back and we're at a much higher level of quality than in the past - and I'll give much credit to the technology (not just the creative skill).
Agreed. His passion and his enthusiasm for the craft is still definitely inspiring and what is needed to be successful in photography today. I love so many of his quotes and things he had to say about photography, and his work and fame are for sure admirable.
Maybe Ansel's work wouldn't stand out so much on Instagram. But most of the photographers who get 1000's of likes and follows I'm sure won't be talked about 40 years after they die.
Yes! Good point. He was a pioneer of this medium we love and worked with so many challenges, today it is so much easier. I've been thinking about this a lot lately, that there are so many excellent artists today, so many, and they will never get the same recognition. But then, many famous artists did not do art to be famous, they just did it because they either loved it, or needed it to survive. We can take lessons from that, do what you love, don't settle for mediocrity, challenge yourself and grow your talent and most of all, share what you know with others.
He'd be the biggest photoshop junkie on the planet and have myriad layers milking every bit of image quality out of those shots that he thought was possible. That's what he did in developing his zone system - push every level of it to boundaries, then marry it all together in a final print...
Thank you for your efforts in talking about photography, but not equipment only. I know it's not easy these days. People only care about the 2 year upgrade cycles instead of taking photos.
The core message in this and many of Ted's videos is that we need to take ownership of the images we want to make. When picking up a camera, have an image in mind that you want to make. Yes, be open to the unexpected and take advantage of opportunity. But begin the day with a clear goal of the image you want to make. By adopting this approach, the camera, lens, light and even the paper on which the finished image is printed all contribute as tools and resources facilitating the evolution of a concept into a finished image. But it's you, the photographer, who drives the bus. Your creative vision guides the final outcome.
Great video Ted! I agree with you about the gear. We idolize these photographers who had a lot less to work with than we do today and it's a true testament to their skill. I try to remove myself from the gear conversations and focus on the aspects of photography that I can improve by going out into the field.
I've been a photographer for 30 year and have seen the spectrum of equipment. I used to shoot for Disney and invested quite a lot into my photo gear. However, there was always 1 or 2 Holgas in my camera bag that I used in between the paid shots. The Holga kept my mind clear and focused on imagery, content, style and the wonder and magic of the unexpected.
Whole heartedly agree with you Ted! Anyone can learn how to use the newest and greatest tech, but it takes something more to actually create something that matters.
Thanks for mentioning the Holga. It takes away vanity and ostentatiousness and rank. It either exposes your shortcomings or reveals what you are capable of.
In a job interview in 1980, I was asked about my hobby of photography, specifically what camera I used. A Yashica FR SLR, but that camera had a Zeiss lens mount . So, I could add German glass to a Japanese camera, but, I added that the end result was not the lens, or body, but the eye of the photographer, that captured the image that was most important. I believe that secured my position, and my career.
Agreed. You really didn't needed to clarify that. They were just being facetious and arrogant. The camera is the tool. I laughed when you spoke about the seeing a photo in a gallery and questioning what camera it could be. So true. That's serious a photographer thing. Getting caught up in gear can be an issue and takes away from what's important. The vision. Great video. Got my mind thinking.
I haven’t watched you for a while Ted but I’m always blown away by your content when I watch it! Thank you very much I certainly need to hear this. I love you passion and honesty. Keep up the great work 👍
Love this discussion about why, in general, equipment doesn’t matter. When I was asked to shoot a friend’s wedding, I peppered a local pro photographer with questions about shots and equipment until he finally said, “just take the pictures.” In other words, don’t get so caught up in the other stuff that you miss the moment.
I couldn't agree more! I am still working with a 10 year old Canon 40D and it does what I need it to do. I also only have one lens, 55-250mm that I bought from Amazon. I have sold prints and I and other people have enjoyed my work. Thank you for the video.
It's great when you do these videos, Ted. No one (not independent creators) I've found on YT talk from such a knowledgeable point of view on the art & history of photography, as you do. More please! My tuppence worth, is that I think many photographers don't value their tools enough, they become too easily replaceable, so they change them too often. Marketing doesn't help with this, but we are able to say "No"... Perhaps many artists (including some photographers) value their tools and even fall in love with them because of the work they produce with them. Then they don't replace them at every chance.
I agree with you wholeheartedly. I shot for years starting with Fuji point and shoot cameras. Moving up to Nikon DSLR DX and finally to the D600 and D750. At this point, the D750 gives me my vision and I don't feel the need to move any further. I do event photography. I get the dynamic range that I want and the ISO performance that I need for night shooting at events. I could get a D850, but I don't feel the need for more at this time. I am focused on improving my composition and mood. I am known for my timing and anticipating what will happen a split second before it does and I have a substantial following in the motorcycle community. At this point, I just want to improve the 'art of photography' and I am having fun learning from people like you and other professionals that I know. I now shoot with mostly older vintage lens that are manual focus and it is really helping me to get better, to visualize better.
Great video along with your others. This video speaks volume. Photographers today do forget that the work is what counts. People care about the final product and how it makes them feel. Do it for the art.
This kind of videos are one of the reaseons of why your channel it's amazing, you try to keep the real essence of photography, and the importance of working with your brain better than your gear.
Hmm, a bit of a click-baity title, (it worked on me!) but not necessarily true. Ansel's cameras, for the most part, were large format. They were the equivalent of a Phase 1 camera today. He had the best he could get, with the idea that he might be making murals from the images later, so he needed the best resolution. Your basic point is very sound. I have about 15 cameras (only a couple are digital) and I think the reason is that I like cameras as WELL as photography. I don't have any delusions that better gear would get me better photos. It's just a question of which one is the right tool for the job. Right now, my favorites are: - Nikon D610 w/ mostly 3 lenses: 24-120G VR, Tamron 70-300 VR and NIKKOR 35 f/2D. I can do almost anything, if I'm willing to carry it. - Olympus E-M10.3 and a fleet of lenses. When I'm not willing to hump the Nikon rig around, but still want lens options, I carry this. - Nikon 35 mm bodies: Same as D610, but for when I want to shoot film - Prime fixed lens rangefinder or point & shoot: For when I want to keep it simple, but still have a great lens
This is so true, and important. As my golf-loving grandfather would say, “It’s not the tool, it’s the fool.”
That’s one heck of a quote💀I love it
sounds like an old man's quote 😂, love that!
yes! we use the title of this video as an argument / response to so many people who feel inferior in photography because they don’t have the latest and greatest. love it.
Don't forget all the people who feel superior because they own the latest gear... I've been shamed on forums for using a Nikon D3300 and manual focus without anyone dare looking at my work hey
Mike, he never said you don't need to upgrade ever; he said to use what you have on hands and shoot!
I'm a pro and just now I am finally gonna get a D610 and I've been shooting with, believe it or not... a D3300... on assignment. Oh yes. Never feel the need to upgrade until now.
Mostly photographers tend to look down on you when you *are* using basic gear, trust my experience! ;)
Mango Stree
So Cartier Bresson didn't have the latest and greatest camera of his time?
"The fact is the relatively few photographers ever master their medium. Instead they allow the medium to master them and go on and endless squirrel cage chase from new lens to paper to new developer to gadget, never staying with one piece of equipment long enough to learn its full capacities, becoming lost in a maze of technical information that is of little or no use since they don't know what to do with it." Edward Weston
For the past 6 years or so, photography for me has been an escape, to use as a form of expression. I am aware there are photographers who are far more advanced in photography than I and there is plenty for me to learn from. However, because of a limited budget and little equipment (just my camera and her two lens), I try to make do with what I have. The quote you shared is quite comforting. Thank you.
How would you possibly know what 3 films and which 2 or 3 lenses to focus on for years to master, if you didn't try 25 other ones earlier on to figure out which ones you liked the most to be worth mastering? You HAVE to start broad. Or I guess you don't "have" to, but it's dumb not to. Does that delay mastery? Yes, but so? Of course most people don't master anything, but if you spent 5 years mastering some random thing you first started with, your mastery would have been a waste of time when it turns out you actually much prefer this whole other setup that you don't discover at all until year 6. Now it took you 5 more years...
Ask not what your gear can do for you, ask what you can do with your gear.
This is a great topic, for Christmas my father gave me a 1973 set of time life photography books that he got at a thrift store, and flipping through them I kept saying to myself that these great photos (many of which I find very inspiring and beautiful ) weren't always sharp, had a lot of grain, and poor IQ by today's standards. It really struck me that none of these would fly in a photo feedback group on Facebook where you get pixel peeped to death today, yet they were timeless and beautiful. Great video
That sounds so nice. Some of my photography was rejected by a company's software, because the machine claimed that they were blurry. I just deleted all of my work from their site. Nothing should be perfect, because photography is like painting. There will be blurs, and imperfections. That's why I love photography. Nothing looks real. Most images look like paintings. I never see them as real life.😊
Someone once told me: "The best camera that exist is the one in your hand."
This simple statement propelled me more than I could've ever imagined, because it let me take more photos and videos, which in turn gave me better photographic skills!
Greetings from South Africa!
This is an EPIC quote! Thank you for sharing!
Thats exactly why i decided to buy a small camera. Budget wise a cheap big one instead would have been possible too at that point but the chance that i would carry the small one around was just so much bigger.
I took a college photography class back in the 70's (showing my age here) and the instructor told all the rich kids to put away their fancy gear; we were all going to use 2 disposable cameras for all assignments for the class. It leveled the playing field but more importantly, it made you think about how to work around your limitations. It was a good exercise in creativity and problem solving. I loved the class. Thanks for bringing up that the product is what matters most.
I needed this! I started my photography journey about a year ago by purchasing my first DSLR. I did bit of research and ended up going with what I determined to be the best APSC I could afford. A year later, after many more hours of research, I'm feeling the pressure to drop thousands on a full frame. As a rememdy, I decided to picked up my dad's old 35mm and have begun experimenting with film just to practice the basics. It feels good to pare down. Thanks!
I’ve been a painting contractor for over 24 years. Better equipment helps me reach my goal faster and easier. But I have seen my competition come and go over the years thinking all they need is the same airless paint sprayer I own and a license. In the end, hard work, attention to detail, and attention to my customers is what lasts.
I love camera equipment. I lust after new technology. I have a Hasselblad, a Leica, and now a Sony a7riii. However, I know many photographers who with a pinhole camera made from a shoebox can take better pictures than I can with all my equipment. I take average photos and sometimes good ones but I'm not Ansel Adams, Gordon Parks, Dorothea Lange, etc regardless of my equipment. They have artistic gifts. I'm a technical guy and I enjoy cameras much from that angle. I work at getting better artistically. I feel good about both aspects but I don't confuse one for the other. Cameras don't take pictures, people do.
This is perhaps the most sensible comment I've ever read for someone on the gear side of the argument.
And that other guy could still take a 10x better picture with your gear than he did with his shoebox. So the final point doesn't really land.
It's videos like this one that make me proud to call myself your friend :) Really outstanding video. Time to go share this in all my social media circles.
Brian you rock
Do you use google+?
Your comments always invigorate and energize me to be better without regard for the tools available to me. As an amateur photographer, I can’t afford all of the wildly advertised equipment. You remind me that it’s about my ability to improve my skills and storytelling. Thank you sharing your passion!
I needed this to quieten the noise of distraction coming from the advertisements and rhetoric that tempts the insecurity in us which thinks we and what we have is not enough. We are enough and what we have is enough, it was and always will be enough. Thank you for this video and I hope it helps quieten the noise for others :)
My cousin is a photographer but my understanding of composition comes from playing guitar over the last 50 years. As I have gotten into photography this last year I recognize so many similarities between the two and am glad for my musical background with the voicing of varied instruments, compositional themes, spacial representation, chord harmony or even the use of dissonance for expression. Again the same thing you are expressing. The cheapest guitar can sound amazing in the hands of an accomplished musician. In fact I cherish some guitars not by cost but by the fact that they are so cheaply made you can easily bend the neck for wah wah sounds or get a more twangy sound which allows for some pretty good impressionistic results. They say beauty is in the eye of the beholder, which is true, but no less assuredly seen through the lens of the photographer.
In order of importance to make greate image
1.photographer
2. Light
3. Lens
4. Camera
Just like
1. Painter
2. Paint
3. Brush
4. Canvas
1.- Photographer.
2.- Selection of a great image.
3.- Light.
4.- .Composition.
5.- Camera.
6.- Lens.
Archontasius
Yes,Sir!
@@francisco.hurtado 2 and 4 are part of the photographer and his abilities I think
The best gear decisions I have ever made are 1) Stop worrying about gear 2) Invest in good glass and 3) it's all about the light (and shadows)and how I see the world anyway.
Ted, your reasoned voice of experience (backed up by practical hands-on experience of all sorts of cameras, exposure to the work of some of the greatest photographers (living or dead) plus you considerable knowledge of the emotional impact of art on the human spirit, makes this a must watch for any photographer.
It comes with the added bonus of helping people to save money (before they get too deep into gear acquisition syndrome that is).
Best wishes
Stephen
You are my hero! It's all true. I started to take photos with an old Canon AE1 from my grandpa. For me it's not important what gear you own...the only fact that matters for me is "How much do you love this"
You Sir, are a great inspiration for me and so many people! Let me say "THANK YOU!"
Best regards from Germany
I love your viewpoint. I HATE when people say "if you don't have the best gear you are not a professional." Photography is ALL about the art as you stated. I look at the end product of the image. Personally for me I don't care what gear someone shot with, I care about what the image is and what it speaks to me with. I loved that you talked about this. We all get too wrapped up into the latest and greatest and forget that true art comes from within the artist!
I agree. I started in the news photo business in 1975 and have never been an equipment guy. Give me something that works and let me do my job. In those days you learned to see the exposure, set your camera and preset the focus in case something happened. Today I've grown soft... I LOVE auto focus and use it most of the time. However, knowing how to do without the auto features makes life easier when they are fooled by events. Love your videos. Great job.
A. Adams spent hours and hours not only setting up, composing and shooting but just as much time if not more in the dark room. He was the master printer.
Richard Salamack and...
hocadidilyocutt and what time have you spent in a darkroom?
@@kieranl5249 Richard is rightly pointing out that printing was as part of Adams as taking the photographs. I’m sure that Richard and yourself spend hours in front of Photoshop. Photoshop is the electronic darkroom.
@@keithmagee4450 you mean Lightroom?
and he shot boring black and white shit
What I love about photography is the fact that I can show people what I saw & felt in a given moment or scene. The gear is only there to help capture said moment or scene, it will never convey the emotions. The image does the talking!! Thanks again for this, I was struggling with gear addiction a bit these couple of weeks, now all I want is grab my camera and shoot!!! Thanks!!!
In over forty years of photography, I have used everything from cheapo P&S film and digital cameras, a Nikon FM, various iPhones, a Sony RX100M5 and two versions of Canon 5D's. I've produced wonderful art with each of them and each taught me something that moved my work forward. But, it's been the 5D's that carry the heavy load of professional work and my best art photography. Like you said, you use the tool to achieve the desired outcome. My cheapo P&S images have sold for as much as my Canon 5DS images, but I would never show up at a sports event with just an iPhone. P.S. so glad I discovered "The Art of Photography". When I'm not shooting, I'm studying to advance my skills and your channel is a treasure trove of information, thanks.
Truer words have never been spoken !!! The biggest insult I ever received on one of my landscape photos was " I love this picture, you must have a nice camera"
Great way to get the conversation going about the issue!
I once had an MFA photo instructor say “gear doesn’t matter, till it does matter”. Or, in other words, the toys don’t matter till they get in the way of the vision.
Yes, content matters most. But photographers need tools that can deliver on their vision. And because the tools are better, we can now dream bigger.
So, gear doesn’t matter. Till it does matter.
One of the things that got me hooked on your channel is how you remind us of this & you show us what cameras are barebones that still make awsome photography.
Please don't delete this video. I'm going to watch it again and again. You've inspired me to be better.
The more videos I see on TH-cam and the churlish, often vitriolic, arguments you see about gear the more I realise too many people are missing the point. It’s not only for the art, it’s also about the enjoyment. Of course the image that matters when talking about the art, it’s all about that finished product that makes people stop and really look. Josef Koudelka must have one of the greatest returns in equipment to amazing image ratios. However, for many of us it’s also the joy of taking an image that makes us proud and we are happy to show others. Here equipment really doesn’t matter at all, despite what many commenters on gear videos say, it’s all about a light catching box you are happy to use and gets you taking photographs. Type, medium, size, age or colour don’t matter at all except to the person making the image, their comfort with their kit and the fact it gets them out shooting on a regular basis does. It’s about wanting to perfect your craft and not appeasing people who think they have a right to tell you what you should spend your own money on, and insult you if you make a different choice than theirs. Photography should be all about wanting to make images not bragging about having the latest, biggest or fastest camera.
Welcome back! As much as the channel has grown and you keep raising the bar with the quality of or your content. It’s this type of insightful monologues that I always add to my favorites to for inspiration.
"Use what you've got, do something with it, and develop that voice." My sentiments exactly. I have seen people with thousands of dollars of photography equipment consistently make boring images they could have made with a point-and-shoot. I have also seen people with a point-and-shoot make engaging images that made me want to see more of their work. Know the limitations of whatever gear you are using and learn to use that gear to express your artistic vision.
Dude, it’s so necessary to say those things from time to time as a lot of folks get all lost camera reviews and pixel peeping, which is an IT dark art in itself and as you say more or less unrelated to the art of photography.. Hope a comment and a like is sufficient currency. I think you spend a great effort here and deserve recognition. At least I pay for TH-cam and appreciate that you keep the ads at bay. Thanks for the show. It’s really educational for the enthusiast. Cheers from submerged continent! Max
Right! I wouldn't sign a painting with a fan brush, but I might flip the brush around and scratch my name in the wet paint with the pointy end. Like you could flip a lens around to shoot macro.
Bravo. Very well said! You could not have named your channel any better because you truly are about the ART of photography. I bought a DSLR camera a little over a year ago. I probably don't shoot as much as a ought to, but you do inspire me to do more. My first camera was a K1000 that I got in 1981. I am so thankful that was the camera I cut my teeth on. I've been struggling with the ability to shoot hundreds of shots over a period of time. I think the digital element is just too fast for me at this point. I'm going to slow down and go back to more of a manual mode and see how that works out. Focusing on the basics and composition. Keep up the great work!
This is one of the best TH-cam channels. Learned a lot from you. You have lifted my vision about photography to the next level. Thanks
This is why I love this channel, it’s not equipment oriented but photography oriented
Episodes like this are your bread and butter and why I hold this channel in high regard. I was just having a conversation about working with limitations and how they tend to bring more creativity and energy to a project. They also help you to understand the equipment in an intimate way so when you do invest in something new you know what features you're looking for and why they're important to you as an artist. Many amazing artists pushed hard against the limitations of the medium and we're kind of spoiled beneficiaries of their dedication. We have no excuses.
This is what I like best about your channel. Well reasoned insight and expression about what photography is, how it evolves and yet stays the same. Photography is about feeling, not technology. Thank You.
From a gearhead, everything you said was spot on. I believe when people say things like you will get laughed out of a wedding for trying to shoot it with an iPhone (deeper pixels, or not) are missing the point. It may not look professional, but it can certainly get similar results in the hands or the right person. The secret is to get it right in camera.(my photography instructor would be proud) Whatever that camera may be.
Man, did you hit the nail on the head. Amen to everything you said. I have tried many cameras, lenses and tricks but I found out that, although I can take some fair shots, I will never be a great photographer. A good, great, photographer can tell a story and get a shot using whatever is at his disposal. He can capture the "IMAGE". Great discussion as always, hats off to you.
WOWWWW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!, Now that's what I call an Inspiration!!!!. I just stumbled upon the Title of the Video and I'm glad I watched. Huge respect for you sir. It doesn't matter what Camera you use, It your skill that changes a bad photo to an awesome one..... THANK YOU
Not to be subject, people evolved in this community give me faith in humanity. So good to hear about things that matter.
I will take it one step further. My photo professor back in the 1970s. Had the class buy a cheap plastic, preset camera. Set shutter,aperture,ect. We had to go out and find the right conditions,on the right day. To match the camera settings. To get a very good exposure. So,off we go with light meter in hand. It was one of the best lesions i learned about LIGHT. Thanks for your videos. I watch them all the time.
Love it.. For years your channel embodied this and was a constant source of education, community and insight. I miss so much of that content Ted!
This kind of content is why I really love you channel Ted. It's really important to work with what you've instead tossing it away for something shiny. Thanks for sharing you thoughts and all you've done through this channel all these years.
As a bird photographer my equipment is very important to me. However, it is not everything. You don't need the latest and the greatest to get fantastic images. The most important thing is to know and understand your subject.
I think it partly depends on what you see as beautiful. There is much pleasure to be had from pin sharp birds’ feathers or other fine detail.
It far easier to talk about the tools than to teach someone how to "see" and use whatever tool they have to communicate what they want to about what they see. How to communicate what I see is my biggest challenge. Thanks for talking about this topic. Hugely valuable.
*Bravo! Well said, Ted!!*
Art is "conversation", so regardless of medium, "art" is the conveyance of an idea/concept from one person to another (or a thought for oneself). Tools are important, but if nothing is conveyed, then the tools weren't as important as one might have initially thought. *Keep up the great work!*
Rock what ya got!! We can be creative with whatever we have. Our most important tool that we have is our mind/creativity. A couple years back I asked a question about fixing my images in a photography group and the first thing most of the members jumped on was my gear. I did get new (used) gear, and I love it, but I realize now that I could've taken very similar images with the gear I had. I also realize now that what I was asking in the group was more of an artistic question. All the best gear can still equate to uninspiring imagery. I want to inspire and be inspired by art. I'm so glad to have found others, like your channel and Brooke Shaden, that helped me to see that I wasn't alone in that.
Bang on. And I get the feeling your talk is more about the issue than about you and that is rare these days. I'm happy to subscribe.
The things you say in this video are spot on. We all love to get nerdy over the tech. But, bottom line-we need to create the material. When the material is viewed, hopefully it tells it's story the way we want. It is understood. Communicates in some way! I've used media created on different devices including cell phones. I prefer the material being a nicer quality...but..no one noticed..except us..those involved in the craft. Get the shot, roll the video, don't let the moment go. We can be our nerd selves and enjoy our tech talk..but we can NEVER forget..the light is never the same twice!
Get the shot! Thanks for this video and what you said! It was great!
Absolutely correct! It's not the gear, but the translation of the vision of the photographer that matters. That does require the photographer to have a vision, for starters.
oh wow! I'm so happy to see you are still doing these videos! I started watching your show waaaaaaay back when you first started. I used to download your episodes on iTunes.
So much has happened since then and now I see you're still at it! So happy for you my dude!
Great words of motivation, Sir! I often find watching your videos for just once is not enough to completely understand your views and teachings. It needs repeated views in order to perfectly internalise them.
Whenever I hear some people, vlogger specially, about eye this, eye that, I go back to my Nikon FM-10 or Canon AL-1 and just remember how to turn the dial, select focus and press the bottom. Maybe is because we do not take the time to frame and compose like before?? I took an 8 days vacation and brough home over 1500 images, I remember in summer of 2000 I did my 2nd Euro trip and came back with 20 - 25 rolls of film and I was in several countries so.... back them they were many many pictures!!
PS whenever I see one of your videos, I must stop doing everything since I need to focus on all the words and images you put together in your message, a LOT of STUFF to think, analyze!! THANK YOU!!! You beyond the “5 star ratings” for the “new camera” videos, and that is why I like this channel so much! Sincerely, from Mexico, Dámaso!
This is so true. I know a lot of people wishing that they had the latest and greatest camera to take a great photo. I always show them old black and white photos of Ansel and ask "Is this a good image?".
After they say yes I tell them that it was shot in film, almost a hundred years ago.
Cameras are tools that we use to tell stories. Capturing that story or moment takes more importance than having 5 more megapixels or having the latest AF system.
Well said Ted! Currently, the past few years I've been drawn back to analogue photography with my 4x5 camera and enjoy creating my own images from film to print. In doing so, I've noticed now, more than ever, I spend more of my time planning how to create my image and learn from my mistakes. It is quite time-consuming but I have come to fully appreciate the extraordinary artistic vision of Ansel Adams as well as many others in this field in the perfection of images as art.
Great video Ted. An important conversation for sure. I recently needed to sell my professional camera and lights, and since have been taking my photographs with my iPhone and some film camera’s. It’s been a few months now and feel getting the same fulfillment shooting as I was with my DSLR. I’m also shooting differently as 100% manual film cameras force me to to slow down. I appreciate that. I tell my students all the time, the camera isn’t really what makes a great photograph - it’s the light, composition, and most importantly what you’re communicating. Thanks for another thought provoking video Ted!
Wow! Its people like you who make us wake up every single day and create more and more.
Salute to the attitude!
Amen. Thanks for the kick in the butt; I needed it. I learned photography in the late 60's on my Grandfather's pre WW II Rolleicord Twin Lens Reflex. The focus lens was out of adjustment so I had to scale focus it, still got some good images. And here I am agonizing over what to take on my upcoming summer trip as if it's going to matter.
Absolutely correct I remember when I started in photography I was told you can tell an amateur photographer from a professional, as the amateur will show you his gear while a professional will show you his portfolio.
Very thoughtful, as usual.
Call me, "old-school" or whatever. I'm not into HDR photography, psychedelic, super saturated images that look more like graphic design than photography (to my eyes), or unrealistically 'clean' night images. I'm a HUGE fan of those old Nat Geo images from the 1970's, 80's, and 90's. I shoot digitally, but I LOVE that old, film look, imperfections, limitations, and all.
I also love the style that comes with the emphasis on getting the shot rather than all the technical nonsense. Great photojournalism and wildlife photography is often the stuff you remember the longest and the most fondly. If the photogs has obsessed with the things people on Instagram obsess over, they'd never have gotten the shot!
HDR has nothing to do with modern gear, there's not any HDR-only camera I've ever heard of, unless you count an iphone as a camera. It's just a style some people use. A modern mirrorless camera can take a better black and white classic zone photo than the Nat Geo guys could, as well. It can take a better anything in any style. It will also get the shot more often, because the controls are all better thought out and faster and more customizable etc. than old cameras from the 70s too. And the specs are broader (faster shutter speeds, faster sync speeds, image stabilization now you can take shots in low light that the 70s guys would have had to pack up and leave in, etc)
Great points. What specific guitar model did Jimi Hendrix use? Or for that matter what specific mixer or microphone was used for the recording for Purple Haze? Technology is important, but it is less important than what you play, or shoot, or draw, or paint.
Trust me - lots of guitar nerds know those answers. But you're right - there's lots of guitarists who played strats, but Hendrix was one of a kind. He had something to communicate.
Music was going to be my other example of an art form where gear talk is a thing.
Well... the Stratocaster was essential to his sound back then, but now there are a bunch of copy cat guitars, so it doesn't matter as much anymore :p
(I get your point though; not arguing with you)
All I can say is, You're kidding right? You just provided an excellent example of why quality of camera gear is important and if you've never dealt with sound I guess you just wouldn't understand. It's not your fault but pick another comparison. Let's say you wanted to make peanut butter, all you need to make a good peanut butter is peanuts (good peanuts grown in rich soil and picked at the optimum ripening time and gently roasted to perfection) and then take a hammer and smash them to a pulp or put them in your mouth and chew them until they are mushy....get my point.
People talk about brushes and paint as well...
Great video. To me the most
Important thing is that the camera, the tool, doesn’t get in the way of creativity, the screwdriver doesn’t need to be the newest one around, it needs to fit in your hand.
Pretty hard to match a 8x10 b&w contact print even with the latest gear. Same can be said about a dye transfer print from a large negative. There is some great tech out atm but it doesn't quite match the old ways yet imo.
I really like the points you make here. I watch you videos because you focus on the craft. That is what is missed by so many. although we all love to talk about the gear, it’s your voice as an artist that really counts. Keep up content that focuses on the art!
Thank you Ted for this video. I was getting concerned how much of your recent work has become much like other channels (focusing on gear). Not that there's anything wrong with that, but a good balance between gear and photographer analysis is what makes your channel different from others. Thank you again for reminding me what drew me to your channel in the first place.
Side point: I learned THE MOST from you and your channel (your composition playlist for example is my gold standard for beginner photography basics)
It’s the same this with musical instruments. People chase the gear used by their idols, but it doesn’t improve their abilities.
Very cool perspective on the history of photography vs. modern tools!
Hats off Ted, it’s always been my philosophy to.
I think the problem with photographers and photography is more deeply rooted. What is photography (or what is it not)?
The many who will try to make a statement that photography is an art will most possibly be the one who like to expose their gear - as if a greater gear makes a better artist. If you dare disagree with these people, they will let you know. Thus a great majority - who thinks like you and me - generally stay silent. (And what’s worst, the many I know who have very sophisticated gear, limit themselves to using very few options that their camera has to offer. There was a time when we had cheap camera but try to make the most out of it in any way we could think of).
Others will just say that photography is by no means an art - mainly because they don’t know all the labor that’s generally needed to create expressive images: knowing your camera, knowing how to process (or not) your image, and knowing what you’re doing and what it is you’re trying to say when you trigger your camera. For few it’s easy, for many it takes years to achieve.
I like to compare photography to another art form like writing. Everybody writes: Some just fill in the blanks in their Internal Revenue form, others like to comments on social media, others write newspaper articles and other write books and novels, etc. And yet not everybody is a WRITER. But such is not the case in photography: Everybody is a Photographer - mainly because many do not qualify photography as an Art. In fact, they are just saying I WRITE - I TAKE PHOTOGRAPHS.
It’s when someone becomes conscious that this media can be as expressive as any other art forms that one will value it like so.
And that’s what it’s all about. It’s not about the people who own the best gear and it’s not about the one who owns the worst gear either. It’s about the end product, the end results.
Ask me what I would like for Christmas: A state of the art high-end camera or a greater ability to better express my art through this media?
Guess what my answer is!
Well said sir!
I catch myself gushing over the a7III as if some of my favorite shots I’ve taken couldn’t have come from a t5i, the first DSLR I ever owned. Fantastic video that constantly pulls us back to earth, and back to the art. Thanks, Ted!
I agree with everything you've said. I started photography 2 years ago on a humble Canon T5i and pushed it past what "pro photographers" told me would be possible. I did portraits, astro, real estate, and even weddings with it. I was happy with the work I produced on that camera and my clients were too. I upgraded to an A7III a couple of weeks ago and there is really no huge improvement in my photography. The only difference its actually made is allowing me shoot more easily in more situations. When I do real estate, I no longer need to set up a tripod for every shot, sometimes I can push the ISO a little higher and get the job done. On weddings I don't need to be as mindful of timing a candid shot, I can hold the button and I'm not limited by the burst. I can shoot wider for portraits and crop in to get the composition the way I visioned without losing too much image quality Expensive gear makes a difference in terms of quality of life, not necessarily quality of the photography.
I am in a MA program and took a special topics class on photography. We were assigned a photo project and I came up with photographing trees that had grown to maturity with a fence right in the middle of them. I photographed them close up in high contrast black and white with the camera tool in Lightroom on an iPhone 6. I don't own a digital camera... I have an iPhone. I've shown this series to other classmates since then and several thought I shot the pictures in film. They marvel at the quality of them from an older iPhone. I tell that story to make this point- It really doesn't matter what camera you have in your hand. You can spend as much money as you want but it won't make you a better photographer.
I love this! I've been shooting professionally since 1995 living in L.A and now Phoenix.. Shooting everything from commercial, to fine art, to weddings and really loving all of it. I've owned nearly all of the important cameras (Hassy, Nikon, Canon, Mamiya, Linhof...) film, digital, polaroid. I went through the "oh! if I get the latest this, that or the other thing, how it will inspire me to be a better artist" thing. I am at times still inspired by a new piece of gear (right now it's my Fuji X Pro3) A good deal of that is true. I have a museum of cameras for this reason (including the Diane... the Holga and some other nearly nameless crap). Then... I watch documentaries of Henri Cartier-Bresson, Richard Avedon, Herb Ritts... etc... and you see that they experimented almost zero with gear. One or two cameras... maybe two or three lenses. Arresting photos CAN be shot with cell phones, and I actually believe one COULD find a buying audience for that work IF the work is truly arresting, beautiful to look at. Almost any cell phone now can make prints in line with a nice, intimate contact print. Not that I personally shoot with my cell phone, but reiterate that, as you said, it's the man and not the machine. Honestly, I don't think we could be living in a better time for creating beautiful photographic art.
1000% agree with this. This is amazing. I love your videos. Always a msg for us in your videos. There were times when I did too felt burnt out and just simply blamed my gear. Got back a few weeks later, never been more happy since. Thanks a lot for this videos
It's highly useful observation that despite the modern-day photographers having all the technology at their disposal, they are yet to come up with 'remarkable' work like the Masters' Photography. It offers a lot optimism to us to make best of what we have than just regretting not having enough. : Sandeep Datta, India
Pretty much everything comes down to one: education! When I was in university I was all about gears, but I took a course in art history about photography. Man oh man how much it had changed me. It literally turned me from a camera consumer to at least think like a print making artist. I see a scene, I know what I want as a print, then it’s the matter of how to fill the steps in between.
Yep- If you have ever read the details on his technique you will find that his equipment created so much flare that he had to modify his exposures to compensate for it. I am very grateful to have studied his techniques, taught his methods and meet him in person.
Thanks for sharing your experience and knowledge.
Spot on! Couldn’t agree more. Older cameras require more thought and process to use. Mamiya 67, Hasselblad or a 5x4. My first camera a Pentax ME super. Manual tactile cameras to use. The only thing modern cameras have over old is speed. Speed to ‘wind to next frame’ speed to focus, speed to work out exposure etc. What makes the image is the photographer vision. We get lost in tech way to easily. My folks are artists. Some brushes cost them over £100 but it’s for the quality of the brush not because it paints a better painting. They do that with their skill. For me it’s more important that I have a camera I find friendly to hold and is a bond. To that I’ve not long bought a FujibX-Pro1. 6 yrs old and it’s clunky compared to my Nikon but I love it. It’s bought back the joy of taking a picture. In a similar way that my old Mamyia 67 or 330f did. It’s a friend, a pet in s way.
Love this episode. Anything to bring attention to the roots of photography is a great subject. I constantly hear people complaining about NOISE or as us old school photographers equate to as grain. It was such a beautiful thing in film that I still appreciate on some digital cameras such as Fuji. I would love to see you create a video that helps bring back the focus to this and all these beautiful aspects that are slowly dying in photography. I know many of your episodes do this already (I haven’t seen them all). Great episode by the way!!!
i can't even imagine why there are people giving this a thumbs down... though, its not to say the gear doesn't matter, it affects to a certain degree but its not the be all. great video and great message
I agree with you. We get caught up always wanting the latest and greatest equipment. That’s why I’m finding myself leaning more towards film photography.
Thanks Ted, it's like you say, a camera is a tool to get a job done. At its most basic level its a machine that will describe the environment in front of it, the photograph is made by the person operating the machine, and their desire to communicate what they're seeing, which will be informed by their collective experiences and knowledge. I know when I studied the work of other photographers, it changed how I think about it myself, for example I love the work of Joel Meyerowitz, I'm not a street photographer myself but studying him and the way he builds narrative into his shots changes the way I think when I compose my own work, and its at this point the camera is just a tool, its features are irrelevant beyond that of being able to focus and expose light onto some kind of media. There is nothing wrong with having a camera with all the bells and whistles, but it won't improve the photographers ability to chose a subject, frame it and build a narrative into the image that will communicate with an audience. It might help you expose and focus quicker, but those are technical functions of photography which you'd expect to be in the realm of the machine, the ability to connect with a viewer and communicate a message or evoke an emotion, that's in the realm of the squidgy fleshy thing operating the machine. So I agree with you in the point that you were trying to make, which is that it's the knowledge that should be transferable to any camera that makes a good photographer, not the camera itself.
Thank you. I've shot all my life, broke my back, literally, and had to lay off for a while. At 71 young I've given my digital stuff away and have gone back to using just my large format cameras. Even using my great uncle's 8x10 Rochester's. It's a challenge for me, but I'm selfish. I shoot for myself.
Now when they make shooting a LF camera a Pra-Olympic event, we'll then......
Thanks Ted. I totally agree 100%. The equipment is only a means to an end. That end is our expression through the gift of photography. Sometimes an expensive camera and equipment is involved but at other times it is an inexpensive camera, like a Holga or Camera phone. The main ingredient should be the image maker. It starts out with the Artist, their gear and then it goes to post processing, be it Photoshop, Lightroom, software of choice or the dark room. Great video.
If Ansel Adams were alive and shooting in color with our camera's today, would his photographs mingle in with the same talent level of hundreds of photographers on Instagram? His skill level was top notch and incredible in his time, and would be with today's cameras as well, but he'd be in the company of many others. I'm just wondering if he would have stood out as much?
I agree 100%. Looking back at his photos - they are ok (definitely great during his time). IMHO, the level of creative skill COMBINED with the latest technology has far surpassed what Ansel has done. I even look back at old National Geographic photos from 20+ years back and we're at a much higher level of quality than in the past - and I'll give much credit to the technology (not just the creative skill).
Agreed. His passion and his enthusiasm for the craft is still definitely inspiring and what is needed to be successful in photography today. I love so many of his quotes and things he had to say about photography, and his work and fame are for sure admirable.
Maybe Ansel's work wouldn't stand out so much on Instagram. But most of the photographers who get 1000's of likes and follows I'm sure won't be talked about 40 years after they die.
Yes! Good point. He was a pioneer of this medium we love and worked with so many challenges, today it is so much easier. I've been thinking about this a lot lately, that there are so many excellent artists today, so many, and they will never get the same recognition. But then, many famous artists did not do art to be famous, they just did it because they either loved it, or needed it to survive. We can take lessons from that, do what you love, don't settle for mediocrity, challenge yourself and grow your talent and most of all, share what you know with others.
He'd be the biggest photoshop junkie on the planet and have myriad layers milking every bit of image quality out of those shots that he thought was possible. That's what he did in developing his zone system - push every level of it to boundaries, then marry it all together in a final print...
Thank you for your efforts in talking about photography, but not equipment only. I know it's not easy these days. People only care about the 2 year upgrade cycles instead of taking photos.
The core message in this and many of Ted's videos is that we need to take ownership of the images we want to make.
When picking up a camera, have an image in mind that you want to make. Yes, be open to the unexpected and take advantage of opportunity. But begin the day with a clear goal of the image you want to make.
By adopting this approach, the camera, lens, light and even the paper on which the finished image is printed all contribute as tools and resources facilitating the evolution of a concept into a finished image. But it's you, the photographer, who drives the bus.
Your creative vision guides the final outcome.
Great video Ted! I agree with you about the gear. We idolize these photographers who had a lot less to work with than we do today and it's a true testament to their skill. I try to remove myself from the gear conversations and focus on the aspects of photography that I can improve by going out into the field.
I've been a photographer for 30 year and have seen the spectrum of equipment. I used to shoot for Disney and invested quite a lot into my photo gear. However, there was always 1 or 2 Holgas in my camera bag that I used in between the paid shots. The Holga kept my mind clear and focused on imagery, content, style and the wonder and magic of the unexpected.
Whole heartedly agree with you Ted!
Anyone can learn how to use the newest and greatest tech, but it takes something more to actually create something that matters.
Thanks for mentioning the Holga. It takes away vanity and ostentatiousness and rank. It either exposes your shortcomings or reveals what you are capable of.
As long as you love it, as long as you and your camera make a team, you are good.
In a job interview in 1980, I was asked about my hobby of photography, specifically what camera I used. A Yashica FR SLR, but that camera had a Zeiss lens mount . So, I could add German glass to a Japanese camera, but, I added that the end result was not the lens, or body, but the eye of the photographer, that captured the image that was most important. I believe that secured my position, and my career.
Agreed. You really didn't needed to clarify that. They were just being facetious and arrogant. The camera is the tool. I laughed when you spoke about the seeing a photo in a gallery and questioning what camera it could be. So true. That's serious a photographer thing. Getting caught up in gear can be an issue and takes away from what's important. The vision. Great video. Got my mind thinking.
I haven’t watched you for a while Ted but I’m always blown away by your content when I watch it! Thank you very much I certainly need to hear this. I love you passion and honesty. Keep up the great work 👍
Love this discussion about why, in general, equipment doesn’t matter. When I was asked to shoot a friend’s wedding, I peppered a local pro photographer with questions about shots and equipment until he finally said, “just take the pictures.” In other words, don’t get so caught up in the other stuff that you miss the moment.
I couldn't agree more! I am still working with a 10 year old Canon 40D and it does what I need it to do. I also only have one lens, 55-250mm that I bought from Amazon. I have sold prints and I and other people have enjoyed my work. Thank you for the video.
It's great when you do these videos, Ted. No one (not independent creators) I've found on YT talk from such a knowledgeable point of view on the art & history of photography, as you do. More please! My tuppence worth, is that I think many photographers don't value their tools enough, they become too easily replaceable, so they change them too often. Marketing doesn't help with this, but we are able to say "No"... Perhaps many artists (including some photographers) value their tools and even fall in love with them because of the work they produce with them. Then they don't replace them at every chance.
I agree with you wholeheartedly. I shot for years starting with Fuji point and shoot cameras. Moving up to Nikon DSLR DX and finally to the D600 and D750. At this point, the D750 gives me my vision and I don't feel the need to move any further. I do event photography. I get the dynamic range that I want and the ISO performance that I need for night shooting at events. I could get a D850, but I don't feel the need for more at this time. I am focused on improving my composition and mood. I am known for my timing and anticipating what will happen a split second before it does and I have a substantial following in the motorcycle community. At this point, I just want to improve the 'art of photography' and I am having fun learning from people like you and other professionals that I know. I now shoot with mostly older vintage lens that are manual focus and it is really helping me to get better, to visualize better.
Great video along with your others. This video speaks volume. Photographers today do forget that the work is what counts. People care about the final product and how it makes them feel. Do it for the art.
This kind of videos are one of the reaseons of why your channel it's amazing, you try to keep the real essence of photography, and the importance of working with your brain better than your gear.
Hmm, a bit of a click-baity title, (it worked on me!) but not necessarily true. Ansel's cameras, for the most part, were large format. They were the equivalent of a Phase 1 camera today. He had the best he could get, with the idea that he might be making murals from the images later, so he needed the best resolution.
Your basic point is very sound. I have about 15 cameras (only a couple are digital) and I think the reason is that I like cameras as WELL as photography. I don't have any delusions that better gear would get me better photos. It's just a question of which one is the right tool for the job.
Right now, my favorites are:
- Nikon D610 w/ mostly 3 lenses: 24-120G VR, Tamron 70-300 VR and NIKKOR 35 f/2D. I can do almost anything, if I'm willing to carry it.
- Olympus E-M10.3 and a fleet of lenses. When I'm not willing to hump the Nikon rig around, but still want lens options, I carry this.
- Nikon 35 mm bodies: Same as D610, but for when I want to shoot film
- Prime fixed lens rangefinder or point & shoot: For when I want to keep it simple, but still have a great lens