(It wasn’t an outright question so much as a raised eyebrow of disbelief. But you see…)
There is a shift that my brain makes when taking pictures, where it goes from what catches the attention of the naked eye to what can be captured through the camera lens.
Some times the shift is hard to make.
It takes more concentration than I have if I’m talking or multitasking so I don’t often take many pictures in a group of people. Instead I make the shift most often when I’m on my own.
When there is no one to tell me to hurry up (except the dogs and they never mind if I fall behind) and nothing to distract me. Then when my focus shifts I can find hundreds of tiny details and shapes that I want to try and capture.
I fiddle with my camera as I experiment with the best ways for it to help me catch the possibility I see in my mind.
I bless the digital camera gods as I snap and review, fiddle and adjust, and snap some more.
Once I’ve started looking through the lens everything seems photogenic if I can just catch the right light, angle, focus, background…
When it comes time to review pictures on the computer there are more misses in my captures than keepers.
And many pictures like these geometric shapes that caught my eye…
…still look just like the rabbit poop and dried corn leaves that they really are.
(And that, Honey, is why I took a picture of rabbit poop.)
I love the second photo!
Thank you!
Never mind the poo, that frozen raindrop between the thorns is stunning!
Thank you! I like it much better than the poo picture too!!!
I like your photos. I’d never pay that much attention to rabbit poop tho but it made a good story. If you would not have told me it was rabbit poop I would have thought “hmmmm unique photo”. Thanks for sharing.
Ha! Next time I’ll have to see if I can slide one through! 😉
Magic, Jessie!
❤