"When I have my camera in hand,
I know no fear" - Alfred Eisenstatedt
A common misconception people have is that fine art majors have the "college life" way easier than say a mathematics major. I had the same idea drilled into my head when I stepped on to college campus a mere month ago. Oh how I was mistaken. Being the naïve college freshmen that I am, I decided to take on being a full time student, plus working. Here's the first two days of my school week at a glance:
Monday:
Digital photography 9:00am-11:50am
Graphic Design 12:00pm-12:50pm
Tuesday:
Photography 101 8:30am-11:20am
English 101 11:30am-12:45pm
Math 142 1:00pm-2:15pm
Seems easy enough, but there was something I did not plan for... Time. Photography requires a large amount of time, money, energy, and commitment. I grew up taking pictures, if I could ,I would avoid being in photos by offering to take them. Up until this year, I was a self taught. By taking these classes are necessary to teach the technical and time management aspect of photography.
Many people thing that photography is just pointing your camera at a person, flower, or sunset and snapping the frame. That is so far from the truth. Time management is a huge piece in photography. You can't over-book yourself with clients, have to plan for the time of day to get the most effective lighting for what you're trying to portray. Not only do you have to time manage for the actual shoot but, after is all the editing and choosing which photos are the absolute best for what the client wanted.
When I picked my classes for this semester, I foolishly did not think about all the time that was going to be needed. For example, just this weekend I spent almost four hours at a photo-shoot, and haven't even started the editing process yet. That was just for my Digital photography class.
| From photo-shoot 09/16/17 |
smile on,



