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Some Photoshoot Ideas

Creativity through limitations

Some Photoshoot Ideas

Becca Farsace recently reviewed the Ricoh RC IV Monochrome, a $2,200 (!!!) camera that only shoots in black & white. It’s an expensive piece of tech that’s very opinionated with its limitations. But it’s what it forces the user to do in those limitations that changes the perspective of what you end up shooting with it. With that, you end up seeing things from a more creative space because you have to work within the rules of what the camera allows. The full review is below:

Becca then has some ideas for those of us who don’t have $2,200 lying around for a monochrome point-and-shoot camera, that any of us can do with our existing cameras:

  • Pick a color and shoot only that color.
  • Shoot in only one location for a set amount of time.
  • Get creative with a prop and use that prop for your photos - maybe this is a filter, maybe it’s a frame.
  • Use your least-used lens.

I’m sure from these prompts you can think of a few others. The point is to use limitations to force creativity.

Accountability and Respect

On filling that habit tracker.

Accountability and Respect

I generally agree with Casey here. Frankly, running every day for two years straight is impressive. But it’s a daily battle for him. And really, the daily internal conversation for him is to do it or not, which he simplifies to just “do the thing”.

I’ve been having my own internal battle with working out. I swear I’m going to be consistent. I keep telling myself I’m going to start on Tuesday. Then Tuesday rolls around, and I go through the myriad of excuses for myself on why I’m not going to work out or why I’ll just do it later, anything except just “do the thing”. I know if I only get started, I’ll learn to be accountable for myself with this. I’ve journaled for nearly three weeks straight by reducing the friction to do so. I can also work out for three weeks straight, which starts at one day, that becomes two, and keeps building from there.

Accountability goes hand in hand with respect for me. Namely, respect for yourself, respect for your space, and respect for others. First, respect for self, which includes things like watching what you eat, getting enough sleep, drinking enough water, working out, going to the doctor when you need to, and in my case, finally signing up for therapy. It really did become a matter of if I have enough love and respect for myself to help myself. I chose to say yes.

Respect for your space starts with cleanliness for me, but also includes the simple things you have to do around your house. Pick up the bowl and put it where it belongs, things like that. Being mindful enough to say, maybe I don’t need that extra thing in my house. This was easier for me when I lived in a studio apartment, but I’ve been guilty of buying things just because I had space that could be filled in larger places. Things finally came to a head for me when I ended up spending the weekend deep cleaning my place. I was happy enough with it that I want to keep it this way now.

Then respect for others and your outside world. This starts with respect for self and permeates outward. I feel like if you’re taking care of your own temple, the kindness you have for yourself should be easier to give to others. It’s things like respecting their space and boundaries. In a world where it seems like people are more self centered, at least here in the States, that might be harder to want to give. But, maybe we should be the examples more then.

Just my two cents on all of this. We’ll see if I actually start running now.

A Couple Thoughts on Blogging

A quick reflection on the value of deeper online conversations.

A Couple Thoughts on Blogging

First, Elizabeth Spiers on her own blog, in Requiem for Early Blogging:

The growth of social media in particular has wiped out a particular kind of blogging that I sometimes miss: a text-based dialogue between bloggers that required more thought and care than dashing off 180 or 240 characters and calling it a day. In order to participate in the dialogue, you had to invest some effort in what media professionals now call “building an audience” and you couldn’t do that simply by shitposting or responding in facile ways to real arguments.

If you wanted people to read your blog, you had to make it compelling enough that they would visit it, directly, because they wanted to. And if they wanted to respond to you, they had to do it on their own blog, and link back. The effect of this was that there were few equivalents of the worst aspects of social media that broke through. If someone wanted to troll you, they’d have to do it on their own site and hope you took the bait because otherwise no one would see it.

This is what I strive to do here, because I see the beauty in it. Not all my friends blog, nor do I realistically expect them to. But I have gotten some face-to-face conversations about some of my posts. Truth be told, I don’t meet face-to-face with my friends as much as I’d like, so this is often how I get to have the conversations that are on my mind.

I’ve also had blog responses and even some email conversations, and I much prefer any of these routes over quick burst responses that happen on today’s social media platforms. There are no constraints with these other avenues outside of our own minds, and there’s little influence outside of what we already know since there’s no wall of noise constantly persisting.


Then there’s Pete Brown, on his blog Exploding Comma, with This is not a post on the Internet.:

Having said all that, I remain unconvinced that I am any better off having posted all of the stuff in all of those places over the last thirty years than had I just written it down on paper. I know that, for some people, writing on the internet has been a way to find a community that they would not otherwise have had. I’m sure that is true.

On the whole, though, I do not think we have been well served by having a place to broadcast our thoughts and feelings for the entire world to see. Maybe it was better when sites were small and there were not algorithms designed to boost the worst, most toxic sorts of rhetoric and interaction, but I am not even sure that is the case.

This does raise an important question of how much of our lives we want to make public on the internet, whether that be on blogs like this one or on our social media accounts. It’s to the point I’m considering using the membership model here, which I can make invite-only, to limit the visibility of my more personal posts. Frankly, some things I’m happy only letting a very select few see. I know of a few others who have also taken this route, adding a little friction to get to the content.

The beauty of Ghost is with some slight edits of code (the documentation looks really good for this), I can have those members-only posts disappear from view. That said, I’m still probably reaching out to the person who created my theme for help with this.

Both of these posts illustrate how we can dig a little deeper within ourselves for dialog. I’m also displaying how we can respond to one another without going about it in some bullshit manner. These are big reasons why this site wins with me.