Good Intentions: Ten for Tuesday

1.

I may not have
gone
where I intended to
go,
but I think I
ended up
where I intended
to be.

~ Douglas Adams
{British comic writer}

Welcome to the
fifth installment of
Ten for Tuesday,
where I share the
latest lesson from
my digital photography
class with you,
along with the
homework that I
will be sharing in
class, today {sans
nervous laugh and
sweaty palms}!

2.
Dreaming of garden sunshine : )
To make things
even more interesting,
I decided to link
up with sweet Sarah's
English Garden Party*,
and since I neither
live in England nor
have a green garden
at the moment, I
had to get creative!

3.
What's a garden party without tea cups?

With that in mind,
Jane {my Sony
a390} and I applied
ourselves to the
homework assigned
for this week:
Take photos that are
intentional.

{Intentional and garden
shots.....High of eight
degrees farenheit today.


Check. check. check.}

4.
This is what gardens here look like in February.

An intentional
photograph is
one that captures
what the photographer
meant to capture.

It expresses a mood,
has simple composition,
follows the rule
of thirds and is
decisive about
what is in focus.

5.

In an intentional
photograph, you
want to make sure 
that you have
everything in
the frame that you
want to see...

6.
Gracie is dreaming of the garden, too....

And that there 
aren't things in
in the frame that
you don't want
to see....

{Ever take a family
photo where something
in the background made
someone look like they 
had antlers?}

Simplicity 
in composition
means that your
attention is drawn to
one thing {or one
group of things}.

7.

There are few objects
in the picture.

It may capture a 
decisive moment.
{A kiss, a laugh, a step.}

If you can't tell what
the image is or if it
evokes a complex
emotion when you
look at it, it does
not demonstrate
simplicity.

8.

Our teacher, Carl, 
told us to practice our
composition skills using
an index card.  Just cut
 a 3x2 inch rectangle
in the middle of the
card and carry it 
with you to frame
potential shots.

9.
Thanks to Lissa for this fresh inspiration!
This card represents
the aspect ratio of your
camera.  The aspect
ratio is the ratio of the
 width to the height 
of the image sensor in 
digital camera.....
{Remember, the sensor
captures images the
way that film in
traditional cameras did.}

10.
Milk or lemon with your tea?

Most digital slr cameras
have a 3:2 aspect ratio,
hence the 3x2 inch opening 
on the practice card.
The actual size of the
digital sensor element is
about the size of a 
small fingernail. 


So grab your
camera, frame your subjects
 and shoot with intention, 
my friends....

If I can do it,
I know that you
can, too!

xx
Suzanne

*
Visit Sarah!

PS:
If you feel
like sharing what 
you capture, stop over
and visit my photography
classmate, Becky
and link up to her
Thrive Project.



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