grantray said:
Both forms start with light. If you see b&w first, that's awesome. From there, think of color as adding a context that can either add or detract certain emotions from your subject matter. A portrait shot with blue surroundings and light may come off as stoic and emotionally charged; whereas if the surroundings and light are warm yellow/reddish tones that same portrait may produce the exact opposite effect of warmth and comfort. A good way to start is by photographing in areas with a limited color palet.
Thanks for the comments, guys.
There are two suggestions I can think to act on right away, and many many more that I will hope to act on as I have time. The first two are to (a) play with color using my DSLR (hey, I should use it for
something right?) and (b) to look for images with a limited color palette.
I've been thinking about this some. My training is in paleoanthropology and evolutionary biology (never mind that I'm currently doing dog genetics -- talk about jacks, or jills, of all trades) and as much as I hate evolutionary "just so" stories (paleoanthropologists are usually all too ready to throw them around) I'll admit I've been thinking along those lines.
One of the hallmarks of primates is that we are higly visual animals (most other mammals rely primarily on touch, scent, and sound) and have excellent color vision. Color is more important to us than it is for most animals, and we see a wider range of colors than most animals. Colors are useful to arboreal fruit and leaf eaters (which most primates are) for a number of reasons. Presumably if you have excellent color vision you can do things like identify ripe fruits or new leaves easily at a distance. I'm not sure what humans use color for primarily, or why, but color may be more likely to orient a person toward a specific object rather than a scene or a pattern. Not very scientific, but I'm just thinking aloud here.
Another hallmark of primates is that we have excellent three-dimensional vision. If you live in the trees, as our ancestors did, you need depth perception, which we have since our eyes both face forward rather than to the side (never mind that animals like squirrels have eyes on the sides of their heads -- these kinds of explanations are never all that neat). This may have something to do with the appeal of photographs with interesting depth of field effects. I don't know. I do know that these kinds of effects are more striking to me in black and white images -- or at least, more obvious. That could have more to do with my untutored eyes than fact.
When I think of being attuned to shapes, contours, textures, and outlines, that seems like a more predatory characteristic to me. Many mammalian predators have poor color vision, and rely more on contrast (and of course movement) to identify prey. They tend to be adapted to hunting in low light, when everything is grey anyway. Most primates are not particularly predatory, and we don't really know exactly how predatory our ancestors were. Anyway, being into shapes, contours, textures, outlines, and contrast seems to be something I'd expect more from a cat, or a wolf.
None of this explains why my color photos stink, but it's interesting to chew on.
I am going to carry either my D70s or one of my rangefinders around loaded with color film, and look for scenes with at most three colors in them to start with.
Thanks again, all.