froyd
Veteran
The past decade taught us to expect near instant replays of photographed events. No sooner a family get-together is over that cellphone shots of it are shared electronically and are waiting for me before I even get home. With the instant gratification placated, a round of obligatory follow-up comments occupies the clan for the next 24h.
Fast forward to two or sometimes four week later when I finally get around to process my roll from the same event, scan the images, and post them in a shared Flickr album that's been curated to focus on a handful for solid pictures. Then... crickets. A week later and the album has a only couple of views. Call around to see if they've seen the Flickr link and all I get are variations of "I did not click on it yet because I already saw the pictures from Aunt Mildred, Cousin Emily, and the ones from Ziggy's new boyfriend. He's such a nice guy. He has an iPhone 7, you know."
Mostly I take pictures for myself, but I see the ones at family gatherings as a record for the whole family, a shared memory, and I work hard to capture memorable photos. Unfortunately, the shared memory, more often than not turns out to be some blurry, not focused, overexposed mess from a flip-phone 0.7mp camera.
If you can't beat them, join them? Maybe not. Or at least not yet. So far, I have a secret weapon that's served me well...everybody gets a couple of prints from my favorite shots!
Fast forward to two or sometimes four week later when I finally get around to process my roll from the same event, scan the images, and post them in a shared Flickr album that's been curated to focus on a handful for solid pictures. Then... crickets. A week later and the album has a only couple of views. Call around to see if they've seen the Flickr link and all I get are variations of "I did not click on it yet because I already saw the pictures from Aunt Mildred, Cousin Emily, and the ones from Ziggy's new boyfriend. He's such a nice guy. He has an iPhone 7, you know."
Mostly I take pictures for myself, but I see the ones at family gatherings as a record for the whole family, a shared memory, and I work hard to capture memorable photos. Unfortunately, the shared memory, more often than not turns out to be some blurry, not focused, overexposed mess from a flip-phone 0.7mp camera.
If you can't beat them, join them? Maybe not. Or at least not yet. So far, I have a secret weapon that's served me well...everybody gets a couple of prints from my favorite shots!