Taking Good Photos

Over the last few years, I have put significant effort into getting better at taking “good photos”. By this I mean images that capture not only interesting content, but also move me on the same deeper, emotional level as my favourite art pieces.

This might seem obvious, as reference photos have always played a huge role in my art-making. Since I came to Japan, I have been gathering and curating my own library, which has proved invaluable in generating ideas, designing, and adding lifelike depth to most of my drawings and paintings.

But the truth is that, for years, I was just satisfied if the location-hunt photos captured all the details that interested me, were not blurry, and were easy to understand. I simply knew that later, when the time came to use them for painting, I could modify, “collage” together details as I saw fit, or re-imagine parts of the composition completely. The goal was mainly to preserve the raw material, not to search for ready-made images to recreate with paint. Even my most photographic-like works in the “Tokyo at Night” book were created as amalgams and my own interpretations of many reference photos.

Something Deeper Appears

The weird thing that happened was that as I gradually upgraded my gear and got better at using the camera as an art tool, I started getting photos that felt different. In between thousands of “boring” reference shots I reviewed and catalogued, I would occasionally stumble on a frame that made me feel something, that was more than just documentation, that meant more for me. And so, just for fun, I made a separate folder on my hard drive labelled “good photos” and started gathering these outliers there, dividing them by year of capture.

The numbers were low, and I purposefully tried to be as strict as I could, aiming to keep only the most meaningful, emotion-filled shots. In a good year, maybe fifty frames got added in.

I did not exactly know why I was curating this collection; it wasn’t like I was aiming to publish it anywhere. It just felt so satisfying to browse these folders from time to time, like I would an old-style printed family album. Go back through 2023, for example, and feel the emotions, memories, and moments locked in the frames flooding back in.

Guided by this, I decided to set my laptop to display these photos at random as the default screensaver, and I knew at once I did the right thing. Whenever I felt bored or my focus faltered, and I looked up from my work, I would see this slideshow and feel a peculiar kind of joy and nostalgia.

The anti-Instagram

Some time ago, while talking to our comic-artist friend Ken Niimura about ways of making work and everyday life feel more fun, he shared with me one of his methods: sometimes whan I feel down, he said, I imagine myself as the hero of a great movie – something cinematic like “Perfect Days” or youthful like “Bakuman” – and then my days and work become again something extraordinary, romantic and cool.

And now I realize that my “good photos” slideshow was doing a similar thing for me. A forced perspective shift that shows my everyday neighborhoods, my family life, my friends, my workspace, etc., back to me in a new light. It reminds me how interesting, cool, and unique they are if I only stop to pay attention. An anti-Instagram effect of sorts, showing my own life as a cinematically edited experience, instead of someone else’s “better” world to strive for or feel envious about. A well-needed antidote to the feelings of doom and detachment that social media can induce.

Without me noticing it happen, taking and curating these “good photos” has quietly become the private art project that may be having the most positive impact on my wellbeing.

My “good photos” folder already has six years’ worth of shots in it. I constantly add new ones and prune those that don’t work as well anymore as my taste and skill grow and mature. I try to make this process as fun and pleasant as I can – little to no editing of the photos, only me as the audience, no technical judgements or pressure to make things “properly” – just positive feelings. It’s a hobby, really.

A living album that makes me want to take my camera with me more, inspires me to be more present in the moment, and to continue learning how to take better photos still.

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6 responses to “Taking Good Photos”

  1. carynslm Avatar
    carynslm

    I love this idea!

    Caryn

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Hoshino Avatar
    Hoshino

    The photos you took are amazing! Thank you for sharing, this is such an interesting look and reminding me of having a photo album to relieve memory.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Tristan Avatar
    Tristan

    These photos are beautiful!

    I do the same– I started out by taking photos of animals I encounter when going outside (it’s usually just birds), but it soon turned out to be a great way to help me appreciate the place I’m living in more. Whenever I struggle with enjoying my time here, I set out to take photos like someone who just got here the first time. I also like to try and notice little things that other people might miss (such as flowers growing in weird spaces). I think this helped me appreciate my current home a lot more, to the point that I will even miss it when I move somewhere else.

    I will do my best to up my camera game (and eye) so I can take better reference pictures for work (and memory) when I return to Japan. Thank you so much for sharing your thoughts, I really enjoy reading your blog.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. optimistic2874d667b1 Avatar
    optimistic2874d667b1

    These photos are awesome!

    I really resonate with the idea of capturing photos with more meaning to them than just containing the detail needed. I started photography during art in my school years and for the most part it felt pretty point and shoot. But after getting a film camera, it forced me to focus on composition and being more intentional with my photos. I think it’s a really good way to improve!

    This was a really interesting read!

    Best wishes,

    Sid

    Liked by 1 person

  5. Veith Z. Avatar
    Veith Z.

    For me, photography means getting out into the fresh air. My doctor has advised me to get some exercise. To take a good photo, you have to put in the effort. Get closer, kneel down or lie on the ground, climb up a rock, then climb back down again. My muscles can just about manage 10 kilometres on a walk. Within those 10 kilometres, I photographed everything in the forest that caught my eye. I always put a lot of effort into my photos. Thank you very much for this article. So, anything but Instagram.

    Best regards, Veith

    Liked by 1 person

  6. Marek Avatar
    Marek

    Zacna kolekcja!

    Proponuję wydrukować 4-6 szt. U mnie zawsze fizyczne zdjęcia miały “własne życie” , bo dla każdego oglądającego znaczyły co innego. Na wystawie w Zachęcie wydruki są robione na c-princie fujifilm i wyglądają oszałamiająco!

    https://zacheta.art.pl/pl/wystawy/barbara-kasten-postabstrakcja

    Stanowczo odradzam wszystkie systemy typu polaroid i instax ze względu na mierną jakość w stos. do ceny! Pozdr.

    Stano

    Like

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