Roger Hicks
Veteran
Dear Jack,Why clutter up a perfectly good title with a boring old picture?
For many pictures, this is the perfect answer!
Cheers,
R.
Dear Jack,Why clutter up a perfectly good title with a boring old picture?
Also, I'd have thought that most of us wouldn't need to remember 30-40 titles. We'd remember the pictures (and the titles) that are important to us: usually, a handful.
Great. I am going to write an article about HCB and give myself all the image credits, because that is where THE ARTICLE comes from.Highlight: Because that's where THE ARTICLE came from. Did you not notice the very first paragraph in the link? Or are you so determined to argue that you ignore anything that does not suit you?
So now I need to Google the titles to know what they mean. So much for easy memorability. What kind of mannequin leg is in your picture? Maybe it is a Hans Boodt or a Bernstein or a Mader? There's your title: "The Mader Leg and All the Rest". Now everyone can Google "Mader" to see what you are getting at.And no, that wouldn't have been a better title. It might have suited you better because you can't be bothered to learn what a Pucci chair is. I didn't know either. So I Googled it. I am more interested in learning than I am in trying to demonstrate my ignorance.
So now I need to Google the titles to know what they mean. So much for easy memorability.[/QUOTE]Great. I am going to write an article about HCB and give myself all the image credits.
And no, that wouldn't have been a better title. It might have suited you better because you can't be bothered to learn what a Pucci chair is. I didn't know either. So I Googled it. I am more interested in learning than I am in trying to demonstrate my ignorance.
That's not fair. Sometimes they're just ignorant. Sometimes proudly so. Time to hit the ignore button, I think.. . . And why is it always when some one disagrees with you, such person is being merely argumentative? . . . .
So now when someone disagrees with you and offers a different opinion, not only are they being merely argumentative, they are also ignorant. More ad hominem. What an ego!That's not fair. Sometimes they're just ignorant. Sometimes proudly so. Time to hit the ignore button, I think.
Dear Rob,I hope I've got better at titles over the years. As much as I do love puns, I have made an effort to resist using those as titles.
But, after reading your article, Roger, and this thread, I think I may need to give more thought to my titling.
I have mostly used simple descriptives as titles but to any one else , I suspect they are not very helpful.
"Waiting for Water" doesn't tell you anything about what that photo is. And while "Waiting for Spring" might be better, that still isn't especially descriptive of what the photo actually is.
And, I have not included the photo itself here: most people reading the titles will have some image in their minds about the photo--I suppose a few may remember it--but, I suspect, that idea is not anything close to what I shot.
So, a better title for that might be some variation of "Boats Hanging for Winter Storage."
https://www.flickr.com/photos/rob_biemer/4586533496/in/dateposted/
Which all leads me to the idea that titles and photos ought to reinforce each other.
Now I just need to work out how I'm going to apply that idea to my photos.
Rob
As much as I do love puns, I have made an effort to resist using those as titles.
Often before I take them, though many of my photographs are deliberately named "Untitled" since they will be part of series - and it's the series that needs a name not the images in it.Another question to ask is: in actual practice, when do you title your images? Do you title your images when you edit them, when you print them, when you mount or frame them, when you post them on the web or show them to friends, or when you exhibit them is a show?