Asher, earlier in this thread you recommended a 60mm2.5 macro lens. Is this a decent general purpose lens?
The lens I love is the ED 50 2.5 Macro which is a sharp lens with great color and excellent for portraits as well as general photography. It is, I believe optically better than the 50 1.4. However, the focus motor is terribly slow compared to the 50 1/4 or the 50 1.8.
The 60mm Macro is for the small sensor cameras such as the Rebel and 10/20/40D and has great reports but I don't know how fast it focuses.
For just Macro work at least 100mm - 150mm is where you should be looking.
Still miles to go, but I'm getting closer to capturing the image I'm striving to get.
This image of the river concerns me Rachel, as I cannot fathom the compositional elements that might it compelling. I could be "missing" what's special and that is not some humor or sarcasm at all. I really am open to instruction and sharing of personal points of view. However, at this stage, I see some of your pictures miss on the following needs that come to my mind.
Image Needs:
1. An
immediate impression that what we are seeing is
something unique that has some independence from the rest of the myriad of possibilities in the universe.
2. The image seems to be
complete.
3.
Sufficient is there to provide context or exclude context so that a particular set of experiences can be reinvoked.
5.
Lighting illuminates the subject field such that form, texture, color, dimension and mood is optimized into a unity that is compelling.
4.
Position and perspective and timing: chosen to place the camera view to align, position, arrange and distribute components with reference to each other and the external world and illuminated such that,
at the time of pressing the shutter release, everything will be fused together in that instant of photographic exposure and make a latent image that has the potential to be brought to life in the "darkroom", digital or classic.
5.
The picture invites and draws one in to ponder and or marvel ask questions, or some other significant reaction showing that it has impacted the human world.
6. The
image has an identity and in the best cases, one wants to stay longer, leaves with reluctance or revisit.
My suggestions. You must go back to exactly this place. I would like to experience a complete "something" in your picture of water going over the rocks.
For a start, maybe anchor the picture with the whole length of the grass. That provides something solid complete and known from which to explore everything else. Seeing the grass cut off at the base, might be something philosophically you have designed (again not sarcastic) and I will stand corrected. However, I do believe you are trying to project top us your experience by the river to which you have a particular bond.
I believe that opening up your breadth of sampling of what you see might help so that we get immediately comfortable before we are given surprises. Again, not a rule, but here, I think, would work better.
The oblique angle of the edge of the smooth water to the rocks is potentially a powerful feature, but why is it not extended? Is that all there was in length? The reflections in the water also have embedded richness but we only see the edges of this beauty.
When taking such a picture, explore first without a lens, just a rectangle cut in a sheet of cardboard or a hand held viewer moviemakers use. Just move around the object of your desire, like a hunter stalking prey, getting into the best position for the kill. Pressing the button does not make the picture. The preparation does.
1. Choice of
subject
2. What is
needed and then add 15% more
3. What must be
excluded but without damaging the esthetic imperatives of #1
4. What events require
timing (shadows, birds passing, clouds arriving, sun rising or setting, people leaving, man and child arriving wind settling down and so forth.
5.
Composition- what shapes, lines, patterns, contrasts, symmetries, asymmetries, textures and colors might draw the eye to explore to points of interest and elicit reactions in the viewer that something before them is interesting, inviting or compelling.
Just moving to the right, angling the camera to the left and going back a few feet might have provided us with a breathtaking experience of this small sample of your river. Even then, attention in post processing to bring out the textures of the rocks and the mirror quality of the water would be needed.
This is hard work, I know. However, transmitting one's vision with the packed values and thrills is worth the struggle!
Asher