This website is loaded with useful tips on photography that will help you get familiar with your camera settings. You will learn how to take good pictures and how to photograph like a pro using our photography tips.
Considering that smartphones have all but replaced point and shoot cameras, it’s easy to think of them as simply a device useful for grabbing a quick snapshot. But today’s smartphones offer an amazing variety of apps and are an invaluable tool for all photographers. Whether you are photographing with your DSLR/Mirrorless camera and want to use your phone for location scouting and planning, or you want to shoot and edit right on your phone, we’ve got you covered. These are our recommendations for the best apps for photographers in 2021. Photography Life
If you’re using a Nikon Z camera, it’s important to check before buying any non-Z-series lenses to make sure they’re compatible with Nikon’s FTZ adapter. This comprehensive article goes into the compatibility of various Nikon and third-party lenses when using the FTZ adapter. Photography Life
One of our favorite and longest running traditions in the Clickin Moms community is our forum photo contest. We announce a new theme at the beginning of the month and our talented members share what they were inspired to photograph.
In our most recent forum photo contest, the Clickin Moms community shared images that embodied the theme “window” and we’ve selected 39 of our favorites that are sure to inspire you.
Congratulations to Krista Taylor for her winning image (above) that has earned her a live Breakout Session from Click Photo School!
You can win, too! Enter this month’s forum photo contest with your take on the theme “plants and flowers” for a chance to be featured here on the Clickin Moms Blog and win a free live Breakout session of your choice!
But first, please enjoy this collection of some of our very favorite and inspiring images from this past month:
Lori McLellan
Kristin Vukcevic
Judith Krasinski
Regina Boston
Sara Morris
Jess Barr
Wendi Matt
Kirsten Malone
Angela Faries
Dallas Denoo
Angela Douglas
Nadeen Flynn
Kirsty Larmour
Brittany Blake
Kamila Štofirová
Heather Williams
Amy Ryan
Christina Freeman
*WINNER: Krista Taylor*
Nancy Drescher
Sarah Dressler
Camille King
Jen Berg
Cassidy Nunn
Lynnae Day
Helen Orr
Lisa Hu Chen
Angelica Andere
Christine Dannhausen
Leslie Crane
Laura Kuisle
Maria Russell
Jennifer Vaughan
Kristen Hourihan
Tracey Richvalsky
Morgan Riley
Hana Kim
Abbi Bett
Erin Clayton
Do you want a chance for your work to be featured on the Clickin Moms blog and to be eligible to win a live seat to a Click Photo School Breakout Session?
And if you’re not yet a member of Clickin Moms, we’d LOVE to have you come join us! As a member, you get access to photography tutorials, video demos, Q&A threads, image critiques, photo challenges and contests like this one, and so much more! Become a member today!
One of the silver linings of this past, very difficult year has been time at home. Time at home with Annie, time at home for dinner, time at home to reorganize the studio, and time to rummage through many years of photographing. Very illuminating, to be sure. There were takes upon takes that made me think I was doing something closer to dumpster diving, rather than mining a worthy archive. The question, “What was I thinking?” bubbled up in my head, much more than once.
But there are things there. Pictures, significant points in time, memories, jobs, people encountered…..which led me to the idea of a new website. A mix of old and new. Work shot a month ago, work shot 30 years ago. Famous folks, odd tales, shot on film, shot with pixels, shot in legendary locales and some, shot just down the block on the streets where I lived.
Presented differently. With some new language and categories.
Over the years, some of the web language governing our site had gotten a bit garbled. No one’s fault but mine. You move so fast, work piles up, and even if you’d like to take a deep dive into something on the studio front, you don’t. Because you’re not there. Lots of time in the air, lots of wonderful places and jobs. The hectic mandate of making a living with a camera. The pandemic has been a big pause button.
Now, just one website – joemcnally.com – simple. We still use the robust engine of PhotoShelter, and rely continuously on the ability of the site to store the archive, send pictures, service clients, and show our larger gallery of work. We are huge fans of PhotoShelter and what they do with and for the photo community.
But Blake…at Limecuda…gave us the ability to craft a new entryway to our existing site, with a much different look and feel. A splash, if you will. Big, rotating pictures. Categories with names like, Double Take, and Amazing and Notable Humans. Limecuda is a skilled outfit that engineers simple solutions to web problems. Blake Imeson and Josh Mallard were patient, steadfast, innovative and responsive. At the early stages of this I required patience as I was like the guy who was moving into the new apartment and couldn’t figure out where he wanted to put the sofa. They came up with solution after solution. Wonderful to work with.
I made a nod to the city that has fed my eye ever since I, unwitting, unknowing, untutored, fell off the turnip truck in 1976 and ended up pounding Manhattan’s endless avenues in search of a photo or two. There’s a category called Concrete Muse. A photographic love affair with urban grit. And the talents who thrived in the city, such as legendary pop artist Keith Haring, above, who influenced a whole generation with his vision. He passed in 1990, but he is powerfully remembered.
And the beginnings of many climbs. First one, shot mostly in B&W, for the UPI. Up the famed Queensboro Bridge, getting a fresh paint job in the late 70’s.
My dear friend and fellow photog of many years, PF Bentley, recently shot me a super solid and sent me a beautiful 16×20 rendition of the moment of the transition of power, from January, 2001. Framed it, and it’s about to go up on the wall. Shot from an unusual angle, it wonderfully, monochromatically shows the inauguration of George W. Bush. Terrific photo, from a terrific photographer, working in consort with an important publication. It’s a reminder of our long-held tradition of the peaceful inaugural process, a hallmark of our democracy, a tradition we have long taken for granted, and one that teetered on the brink this past January.
Storytelling pictures. Moments in time. Photographers, I would submit, are more important than ever, even though, along with the rest of the world, we have taken it on the chin of late. Truth be told, our profession has been under assault for many years now, long before COVID, with the diminution of rates paid for our services, and the evisceration of rights to the images we create. Many newspapers have abandoned the notion of maintaining a staff, deeming it too expensive. Most magazines are a shell of what they once were, if they continue to publish at all. Bleakness abounds. A photo editor of a major publication, in an interview not too long ago, offered sobering advice to young, would-be photojournalists. Basically, she counseled that it would be advisable to have a trust fund, should you try to do this job.
In the face of all the daunting headwinds photographers face, what do they do? What they have always done. They retain passion and excellence. They continue to find a way, creating new and unique paths to continue to shoot and report effectively. Long time Contact Press Images photographer Ken Jarecke has launched The Curious Society, a group dedicated to supporting photojournalism. Which means paying photographers. They are going after this by supporting grants, advocating for fair licensing fees for usage of photos, and trying to create an environment where photogs can feel sustained as they do their work. It’s tough to concentrate on the story at hand when you can’t make the rent.
Young photographers, such as the very talented Maranie Rae, are opting for funding via grants, and partners, or sites like Patreon, Venmo amongst others. Malike Sidibe has combined art and photojournalism in extraordinary ways, shooting searingly important pictures in the streets during the Black Lives Matter protests, at the same time pursuing interpretive, dreamlike portraiture and fashion. Mark Peterson continues to work for publications, but also creates revealing, powerful books, unflinchingly showing us to ourselves.
Ami Vitale has become a powerhouse voice, creating the awareness that so many creatures of the natural world teeter on the brink of extinction. Polly Irungu is both photographer and activist founder of Black Women Photographers, a community that offers a powerful and persistent advocacy for black female photographers. An advocacy that includes listing and promoting photographers to clients, so they can work, and get paid, and therefore sustain.
And there is a continuum! Photographers who have passed on continue to influence. Witness the Gordon Parks Foundation, talking to all of us via Instagram, reminding us of how Mr. Parks’ boundless creative spark would not be quenched. He left a gift for all of us, a gift which speaks today, in compelling ways. Sir Donald McCullin, now in his 80’s is also on Instagram, reminding us all of the power of the camera. As he says:
“Photography for me is not looking, it’s feeling. If you can’t feel what you’re looking at, then you’re never going to get others to feel anything when they look at your pictures.”
The Monroe Gallery continues to celebrate historically important photojournalism, and relentlessly advocates for the photographer. All these forces remind us, whether they come from the traditional world of ink on paper, or have grown their voice on the Internet, the basis for it all is a good photograph.
The list goes on. Alicia Hansen has created NYC Salt, an organization that supports the necessary creativity of young communicators, and helps them push forward for ongoing education, honing their skills in all manner of visual storytelling. My dear friends Liza Politi and Ari Espay have created Statement Arts which labors tirelessly in support of the stated mission described below.
Statement Arts is a not-for-profit organization dedicated to bringing the creative visual & performing arts to underserved and/or low-income individuals. We channel creativity to educate, to enhance intellectual performance, to empower and guide, and to build self-esteem. Statement Arts is committed to giving our students an intercultural and interdisciplinary arts experience to which they do not have access. Statement Arts believes in the power of art to inspire social, cultural, and environmental education to further a legacy of responsible global citizenship.
These are just a few. But their efforts are a reminder of the persistence of the importance of the still photograph, of communicating visually, without screaming rhetoric and heated words. Pictures just are. They speak, powerfully, wordlessly.
Thanks PF. Not just for the print, but for reminding me all over again just how important this is.