NOTE: The eagle-eyed amongst you will notice that there are actually a couple of breaks in the image sequence on my contact sheet. This is because if I hit the shutter by accident when I'm out shooting, then I delete the image in camera on the spot, but I have included every image I brought home in the sequence.
@@rosaclovis yeah I like that one as well. in my opinion, Id be lucky to get 1/10th of these. what amazes me is his metering /exposure is SPOT ON and awesome dynamic range and high contrast in each image.
Love the way you applied the Magnum Contact Sheets concept to a bit of your own work and brought out the importance of noticing light and locations with potential, then working scenes and, in doing so, giving luck a chance. Your results are beautiful, but there is also beauty in the creative process that gets you there. And you remain one of RUclips's most inspiring photography teachers, Sean.
I just wanted to let you know that you've become a huge source of motivation, inspiration, and knowledge. Appreciate you, your work, and the fact that you put these videos out.
I was watching your video in my office and my wife shouted from another room "that guy sounds just like you going through your images" it made me smile but it also reassured me that I was at least doing something right. Another great insight and thanks again for sharing.
Please don't stop making these videos. They're just what I need to get me out of my motivational rut(s) in photography. Your honesty and candidness are so refreshing. Thanks for being so vulnerable for us all. I finally found a modern photographer that I can actually relate to... thank you!
I think that videos like this are the most realistic way to show and teach how to go about and make photos on the street, hope to see more of this Sean, really liked it! thank you!
I love how thorough and honest you are when it comes to your videos, you’re one of.. if not the best influencer when it comes to photography on RUclips to date!
Thanks Sean. You're a very honest person. We look at the photographs of great photographers and wonder in awe at how all their shots are great and are disappointed when we go out and 90% of our shots are just not keepers. It's encouraging to know that even the best photographers go through the same trial and error process to get that one keeper.
The way you put more courage to us is astonishing! I devour your videos not only to learn about photography but also to heal my failures and the succeeding frustration.
Thank you for showing us the underwater view of how the swans glide effortlessly along the pond. Many photographers may not like people to see the hidden hard work underneath so as to prop up their mystical anterior. I do enjoy your videos. Thank you for being insightful and truthful.
Thank you, Sean for generously sharing. You have given us much needed insight, thoughtful encouragement, and most importantly for me, reassuring that self doubt is part of our growth process. Keep up the great work!
I follow a few photographers but you are the only one I can sit and listen to without drifting off and/or getting distracted. You could make a great audio book.
Sean, you truly are the most insightful person I follow on youtube. In an age where people are exposed every day to content makers with hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions of followers, its easy to forget the journey that they have all been on to get where they are. Unfortunately we've been conditioned to show only the exceptional, not what it takes to get us there. I find your work and your sheer honesty inspirational. Dont ever stop!
I like watching a lot of photography youtubers, but you... you are THE most inspirational. I see a lot of my work the same way you described all of yours. Thank you.
Your remarks at the end remind me of Robert Frank's "The Americans" He took(and take this with a grain of salt, I don't remember the exact numbers off the top of my head) upwards of 20,000+ photos to end up with 80 something in his book. And that was in the age of film too.
Wow! This video does a great job of demonstrating how difficult street photography can be. A good lesson for those of us that want immediate results, with as little effort as possible. Thanks.
Sean, you are a natural teacher. Thank you for this! Getting back into photography after a long absence, I'm still very much discovering my eye again. This look into your creative process is invaluable.
Really enjoy your visual and verbal storytelling Sean.. I've grown as a photographer by watching and learning from what you so generously share with your audience.
Sean, I am not sure how I found your channel however I am very pleased. Awesome content I can relate to even as a novice. Finally a real photographer and not an over produced RUclips program. Bravo.
Love the message Sean, it's so easy to get discouraged when I take so many pictures or videos and only 1 or 2 meet my standards. It's all just part of the process
we as photogs are always harder on ourselves. Im a perfections at heart so I know the feeling but dont get discouraged. if you knew how many HUNDREDS of THOUSANDS of shots the pros took to actually get the iconic shots over history you would be amazed. sure they had "the eye" but it still was work not always easy,
A quality, considered piece, as ever. Contact sheet and talk through is excellent. It helps not by copying your process and strategy, or tactic.. but by making one realise what OUR methods are.. Enjoyed your effortless, soothing and supportive words.
Yet another great class Sean. Thanks for the personal conversation and in-depth sharing insight. Exposing the contact sheets of a day's outing and viewing each image and collection - brilliant. This covers the base we all experience, and your assurance of it's usual, and to be expected, common outcome across the photographer spectrum was so encouraging.
Sean this is a brilliant video. Thanks for sharing it. It was really insightful to see your process and reassuring that we don't always have to come back with that perfect shot!
Thanks for sharing. Brutally honest. Really interesting to watch and learn from your reflections and observations. It’s all about being out there capturing those moments and enjoying it. Thanks.
Haters will always hate but that's more of a reflection of who they are and their personal turmoils. There are some of us who genuinely love your work and what you represent. Great work as always Sean!
Sean, this episode was remarkable! It's such a valuable insight to see how the process works, I never saw light the same way again after watching your videos. You're a mentor in many ways. Thanks!
I love your work Sean AND your approach. A fisherman will spend all day and catch nothing but he will still have had a great day. If it was that easy you'd not do it with so much passion. Keep up your work, I love it. 👍
I don't understand people criticizing others' work...because someone is making different images, it doesn't make them bad! This is an art form - I think you are a wonderful photographer!!
Such a comforting video. I've just got back from an early evening wander around a rainy Winchester. Took 33 shots, got one shot which I really like, the rest were rubbish! Which is perfectly normal for me. So I'm relieved to hear that the experts have the same kinda ratio. Keep up these wonderful, articulate videos. Great stuff.
Thanks Sean, found this video really useful in your approach to working a scene. I've stopped watching most you tube photography channels as I don't think I learn much from them. Your videos are thought-provoking and educational, keep em coming, please!
I love your attitude and encouraging words for all photographers out there including me personally, and I want to thank you for that. Keep it up so your words reach more people.
Sean, something so beautiful and honest and open about this video. You also touch upon something quite lovely, at least to me - sometimes it's fun just to take a photo of something, in the same way it is quite fun to just doodle with pen and paper sometimes.
great. the more you have your camera with you the better chance of a success and it puts you into the mindset of a photographer alwats LOOKING for the light/shadow even if you dont take 1 pix it puts you in photog mode :)
I have the same camera, and my lunches are really my only time available to shoot on the street - but that's five hours of shooting per week I would otherwise squander. I'm glad you feel encouraged, too!
Thank you once again for your candid remarks about prospective, process, and the reality of street photography. Helps me to keep shooting with emphasis to capture the moment.
This is easily one of the reasons I subscribe, this behind the lens/inside the head stuff. Thanks so much for sharing, the processes are always so interesting.
What i like about sean is he doesnt focus on the gears, he explain it tho. But the art in photography is what makes me watch him. Im new to photography and im glad I cross at his videos his vlogging/filmmaking style is so far from any other vlogging photographer. I just want to say thanks for your videos, Sean. Keep uploading to inspire more people. Stay Safe. Im from Philippines btw.
Sean, just so you know, no one really judges your work. I looked through those contact sheets, and I knew exactly which ones you would pick. You have accomplished it actually. I know your eye. So cool to see the process, thanks. I would have loved to work on a couple that your eye didn't like. But, that is why we are human, and that is why I love your channel for a larger reason. Thank you.
Thanks Sean for such an interesting insight into your work process. You actually make me feel much better about my own process which to now has left me feeling frustrated by the lack of keepers asa ratio of shots.
Couldn’t agree with you more Sean. Being mostly a film shooter my measurements are in rolls of film -> 36 exposures. On a good day I’ll get through 1-2 rolls and out of those 72 exposures I’m happy to get at least 1 or two images. Also touching on working the scene, most of the time My roll of film is spent only photographing maybe 2-3 important scenes. A lot of the photos are made by working the scene like you were saying. This almost makes me want to just go digital because realistically speaking spending the money for film + developing each roll gets expensive. Your channel has sparked tons of thought and inspiration. Really digging everything you’re putting out man. If you’re ever in the San Francisco area, hit me up. Let’s shoot!!
Thank you for all your videos , but thank you particularly for this one. I laughed when you opened with the Magnum book of contact sheets - I had picked that book up at a second hand bookstore - highly tempted but saying to myself that I had enough books on photography. Now I have the perfect excuse to indulge! Setting up and going through images of one of your shooting sessions was incredibly helpful and very fulfilling. I think I’m more of a hunter than a fisher, but moving towards more of a fisher. Thank you again for all your hard work.
I love your work AND the WAY you work. Stay true to yourself, as always. If you love what you do, it means that you are doing the right thing. Embrace it and never stop experimenting because as you once said, art comes out of experimentation! Keep it up! And it's good for every single one of you reading this ;)
note i am really new to photography, still taking courses, I have taken 8 pictures,plus drone photos, a few cell phone. but you are my kind of photographer, you have the ideas i see, I'm not doing this for weddings,or portraits, i love buildings,landscapes,animals,big trucks,etc..you are the first i have heard about street photography, before you said anything I had in my head I don't care if everyone is better at it than me,take a lot of photos and choose the ones you like, you can hear it from your voice you really are a photographer enjoying walking around taking photos the planning,etc.. keep the videos coming, even if someone don't like your photos (which i do) its your story..i get down sometimes cause i have a 80 hr job,and i have a lot to learn,i'm still discovering more things..
Thank you Sean. It is so encouraging to see that even the great photographers have a low hit to high shot ratio. I need reminding of this after I take a hundred shots and come home with nothing great. Your videos are all so well made and inspiring, moving even. Keep up the great work!!
5 лет назад+1
Great ! Thank you for your really useful and high-quality teachings!
Really interesting vlog, it’s great to hear everyone’s back story as to how they got the shot, however seeing it with a contact sheet is even better. Great work Sean.
Seeing the photos that 'didn't work' is incredibly motivational. It shows, just as you said, that there's no point'n'shoot but rather a trial and error process.
Great video Sean! Not only was it reassuring for photographers to not be put off by seeing others post great photo as if they're "first tries", it was also interesting to see how you go about choosing your finals.
Thank you for sharing your creative thought and process. As an amateur film photographer I have found so meaningful your choices of taking frames for mental notes, and how they serve a purpose in your creative process. It makes me think how I can employ a similar strategy, and whether I need to be a hunter or fisher to achieve my final vision.
Wow! I really liked this a lot Sean. Being new to photography this took the pressure off of thinking I'm failing if I come home after a day of shooting and nothing great to show for it. Your videos are truly inspiring and motivational, thank you.
Sean, Thanks for that. I like to take photos of what I find interesting. And often I get demoralised by my lack of creativity. So a bit of an inspirational piece this, for me. I like a lot of your photos so I am inspired by your “failures”. “……1% inspiration and 99% perspiration” as someone more creative than me once said 😊
A great book - I got it a few months ago and it does make you appreciate the process of creating a great composition and how my images evolve from seeing a potential scene in to a final image.
Your work is amazing !!! I just started back in being interested in photography/videography. Everything you said made so much sense and it caused me to stop and think about what I am looking for in any image. Thank you for sharing your thoughts!!!
Another piece of inspiration for those of us who wonder at the images of the masters. I adopted a philosophy a while ago of 20 crap photos a day and this has helped me to learn to see potential even if at the end of it nothing is shared. It’s the process for me not necessarily the result
Inspiring stuff. Love the “looking for light” approach , it definitely suites me. I am going to try this fisherman approach in Kings lynn. Love the use of shadows. MJ
Have this book too. It's defiantly a great book that inspires and teaches photographers a lot by showing what those great photographers were thinking and under what conditions when they took those photos. This is a book that can be studied for good
I've stumbled onto your videos. I really like the focus on process, especially in this one, because it helps me lower expectations. Loved it. I'm a fisherman too. Being an introvert makes it more challenging, but will give it a go once we're out of lockdown again. Cheers.
This was an incredible video Sean! I've always found street photography to be quite difficult and seeing your process was tremendously beneficial. It will help me focus my approach next time I go out. Also, just getting a glimpse into how you think when you're shooting is of tremendous value. Thank you so much for putting the time and effort into creating this video! It was one of the best photography videos I've watched in a long time.
NOTE: The eagle-eyed amongst you will notice that there are actually a couple of breaks in the image sequence on my contact sheet. This is because if I hit the shutter by accident when I'm out shooting, then I delete the image in camera on the spot, but I have included every image I brought home in the sequence.
Sean Tucker I don’t care! You are a photographer in the truest sense 🙏🏾✌🏽
Don't delete in camera. You run the risk of corrupting your card. Not worth it.
@@Whatisright That's actually a myth that has been dispelled. Modern cards have no such issue.
@@rosaclovis yeah I like that one as well. in my opinion, Id be lucky to get 1/10th of these. what amazes me is his metering /exposure is SPOT ON and awesome dynamic range and high contrast in each image.
@@Nevpaurion7 the risk is still there
You can’t imagine how much better that makes me feel about the times I come home and shots have not worked. Thank you
imagine if you were shooting with film...
Totally agree
Sean, you're great. Thoroughly enjoyed this episode.
Cheers mate. I appreciate that.
Love the way you applied the Magnum Contact Sheets concept to a bit of your own work and brought out the importance of noticing light and locations with potential, then working scenes and, in doing so, giving luck a chance. Your results are beautiful, but there is also beauty in the creative process that gets you there. And you remain one of RUclips's most inspiring photography teachers, Sean.
Thanks Marc
I just wanted to let you know that you've become a huge source of motivation, inspiration, and knowledge. Appreciate you, your work, and the fact that you put these videos out.
I was watching your video in my office and my wife shouted from another room "that guy sounds just like you going through your images" it made me smile but it also reassured me that I was at least doing something right. Another great insight and thanks again for sharing.
Peas in a pod:)
Please don't stop making these videos. They're just what I need to get me out of my motivational rut(s) in photography. Your honesty and candidness are so refreshing. Thanks for being so vulnerable for us all. I finally found a modern photographer that I can actually relate to... thank you!
I think that videos like this are the most realistic way to show and teach how to go about and make photos on the street, hope to see more of this Sean, really liked it! thank you!
Agree 100%
I love how thorough and honest you are when it comes to your videos, you’re one of.. if not the best influencer when it comes to photography on RUclips to date!
I really can't believe the usefulness and the quality of these videos. Showing the reality behind taking great photos.
You are one of the most honest people out there. Thank you for your guidance. You are wonderful!
Thanks Sean. You're a very honest person. We look at the photographs of great photographers and wonder in awe at how all their shots are great and are disappointed when we go out and 90% of our shots are just not keepers. It's encouraging to know that even the best photographers go through the same trial and error process to get that one keeper.
The way you put more courage to us is astonishing! I devour your videos not only to learn about photography but also to heal my failures and the succeeding frustration.
Thank you for showing us the underwater view of how the swans glide effortlessly along the pond. Many photographers may not like people to see the hidden hard work underneath so as to prop up their mystical anterior. I do enjoy your videos. Thank you for being insightful and truthful.
Thank you, Sean for generously sharing. You have given us much needed insight, thoughtful encouragement, and most importantly for me, reassuring that self doubt is part of our growth process. Keep up the great work!
I follow a few photographers but you are the only one I can sit and listen to without drifting off and/or getting distracted. You could make a great audio book.
Sean, you truly are the most insightful person I follow on youtube. In an age where people are exposed every day to content makers with hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions of followers, its easy to forget the journey that they have all been on to get where they are. Unfortunately we've been conditioned to show only the exceptional, not what it takes to get us there. I find your work and your sheer honesty inspirational. Dont ever stop!
I am not a photographer and still like your videos. I think its the honesty what makes me watch them. Thanks.
Thank you! Very encoureging to keep on taking pictures. Really thank you for the honest look inside your work.
One of your absolute best! Watching the contacts and listening to your comments was a Master Class experience. Please do more like this!
Thank you Sean for, not only your expertise, but your honesty. I’m an amateur photographer and your videos are so helpful.
I like watching a lot of photography youtubers, but you... you are THE most inspirational. I see a lot of my work the same way you described all of yours. Thank you.
thanks for sharing Sean. Very generous of you to be so open, and greatly appreciated.
Awesome video Sean. Great to see your process and thoughts as you stalk for a good photo. Thanks for sharing!j
Your remarks at the end remind me of Robert Frank's "The Americans"
He took(and take this with a grain of salt, I don't remember the exact numbers off the top of my head) upwards of 20,000+ photos to end up with 80 something in his book. And that was in the age of film too.
Wow! This video does a great job of demonstrating how difficult street photography can be. A good lesson for those of us that want immediate results, with as little effort as possible. Thanks.
Sean, you are a natural teacher. Thank you for this! Getting back into photography after a long absence, I'm still very much discovering my eye again. This look into your creative process is invaluable.
Really enjoy your visual and verbal storytelling Sean.. I've grown as a photographer by watching and learning from what you so generously share with your audience.
Sean, I am not sure how I found your channel however I am very pleased. Awesome content I can relate to even as a novice. Finally a real photographer and not an over produced RUclips program. Bravo.
Only 3:50 into this video and already it's brilliant!
Love the message Sean, it's so easy to get discouraged when I take so many pictures or videos and only 1 or 2 meet my standards. It's all just part of the process
we as photogs are always harder on ourselves. Im a perfections at heart so I know the feeling but dont get discouraged. if you knew how many HUNDREDS of THOUSANDS of shots the pros took to actually get the iconic shots over history you would be amazed. sure they had "the eye" but it still was work not always easy,
Every video you make is so timeless.
It’s always a joy watching one of your videos and this was no exception, really informative and inspirational , thank you.
A quality, considered piece, as ever. Contact sheet and talk through is excellent. It helps not by copying your process and strategy, or tactic.. but by making one realise what OUR methods are.. Enjoyed your effortless, soothing and supportive words.
Yet another great class Sean. Thanks for the personal conversation and in-depth sharing insight. Exposing the contact sheets of a day's outing and viewing each image and collection - brilliant. This covers the base we all experience, and your assurance of it's usual, and to be expected, common outcome across the photographer spectrum was so encouraging.
Just loved this video of yours. Its given me a bit of a morale boost to now go out and shoot without any added pressure 😊
Amazing. I can't tell you how much I appreciate you taking the time to make this video.
Fantastic episode Sean. Absolutely glued to this one. You really are a guiding light for us vulnerable photographers .
Sean this is a brilliant video. Thanks for sharing it. It was really insightful to see your process and reassuring that we don't always have to come back with that perfect shot!
Thanks for sharing. Brutally honest. Really interesting to watch and learn from your reflections and observations. It’s all about being out there capturing those moments and enjoying it. Thanks.
Haters will always hate but that's more of a reflection of who they are and their personal turmoils. There are some of us who genuinely love your work and what you represent. Great work as always Sean!
Sean, this episode was remarkable! It's such a valuable insight to see how the process works, I never saw light the same way again after watching your videos. You're a mentor in many ways. Thanks!
I love your work Sean AND your approach. A fisherman will spend all day and catch nothing but he will still have had a great day. If it was that easy you'd not do it with so much passion. Keep up your work, I love it. 👍
I don't understand people criticizing others' work...because someone is making different images, it doesn't make them bad! This is an art form - I think you are a wonderful photographer!!
I really appreciate your videos, so easy to connect with your guidance. So inspiring Sean, Thank you!
Such a comforting video. I've just got back from an early evening wander around a rainy Winchester. Took 33 shots, got one shot which I really like, the rest were rubbish! Which is perfectly normal for me. So I'm relieved to hear that the experts have the same kinda ratio. Keep up these wonderful, articulate videos. Great stuff.
Thanks Sean, found this video really useful in your approach to working a scene. I've stopped watching most you tube photography channels as I don't think I learn much from them. Your videos are thought-provoking and educational, keep em coming, please!
Sean, you are something , I like what you do.
I love your attitude and encouraging words for all photographers out there including me personally, and I want to thank you for that. Keep it up so your words reach more people.
Your videos are incredible. Such deep thought and thorough explanation of things. Thank you!
Sean, something so beautiful and honest and open about this video. You also touch upon something quite lovely, at least to me - sometimes it's fun just to take a photo of something, in the same way it is quite fun to just doodle with pen and paper sometimes.
Hi Sean, your take on street photography and general philosophy is inspiring, thank you.
Watching this made me decide to bring my Fuji X-T30 to the office tomorrow to take some street shots during lunch 🌁
great. the more you have your camera with you the better chance of a success and it puts you into the mindset of a photographer alwats LOOKING for the light/shadow even if you dont take 1 pix it puts you in photog mode :)
I have the same camera, and my lunches are really my only time available to shoot on the street - but that's five hours of shooting per week I would otherwise squander. I'm glad you feel encouraged, too!
@@aarondigruccio4356 That's 20 hours a month. More than enough to get you some amazing shots. Don't stop.
Can't help but get inspired from each video I watch of yours
Thank you once again for your candid remarks about prospective, process, and the reality of street photography. Helps me to keep shooting with emphasis to capture the moment.
Thanks Sean, as an architect, film photographer and reluctant digital convert . . . have really enjoyed your outlook! Thanks!
This is easily one of the reasons I subscribe, this behind the lens/inside the head stuff. Thanks so much for sharing, the processes are always so interesting.
What i like about sean is he doesnt focus on the gears, he explain it tho. But the art in photography is what makes me watch him. Im new to photography and im glad I cross at his videos his vlogging/filmmaking style is so far from any other vlogging photographer.
I just want to say thanks for your videos, Sean. Keep uploading to inspire more people.
Stay Safe.
Im from Philippines btw.
I appreciate that!
Very inspiring! Tank you for sharing your knowledge. As a visual artist, I look up to you, your work and most importantly, your philosophy!
Thank You Sean for explaining your process. I learn so much by following your channel. Keep up the great work!
Sean, just so you know, no one really judges your work. I looked through those contact sheets, and I knew exactly which ones you would pick. You have accomplished it actually. I know your eye. So cool to see the process, thanks. I would have loved to work on a couple that your eye didn't like. But, that is why we are human, and that is why I love your channel for a larger reason. Thank you.
Really helpful and instructive. Appreciate your honesty and vulnerability in sharing these images.
Thanks Sean for such an interesting insight into your work process. You actually make me feel much better about my own process which to now has left me feeling frustrated by the lack of keepers asa ratio of shots.
Couldn’t agree with you more Sean. Being mostly a film shooter my measurements are in rolls of film -> 36 exposures. On a good day I’ll get through 1-2 rolls and out of those 72 exposures I’m happy to get at least 1 or two images.
Also touching on working the scene, most of the time My roll of film is spent only photographing maybe 2-3 important scenes. A lot of the photos are made by working the scene like you were saying. This almost makes me want to just go digital because realistically speaking spending the money for film + developing each roll gets expensive. Your channel has sparked tons of thought and inspiration. Really digging everything you’re putting out man. If you’re ever in the San Francisco area, hit me up. Let’s shoot!!
Brilliant video. Thank you for sharing your candid insights about your process. I found it super useful.
Thank you for all your videos , but thank you particularly for this one. I laughed when you opened with the Magnum book of contact sheets - I had picked that book up at a second hand bookstore - highly tempted but saying to myself that I had enough books on photography. Now I have the perfect excuse to indulge!
Setting up and going through images of one of your shooting sessions was incredibly helpful and very fulfilling. I think I’m more of a hunter than a fisher, but moving towards more of a fisher.
Thank you again for all your hard work.
I love your work AND the WAY you work. Stay true to yourself, as always. If you love what you do, it means that you are doing the right thing. Embrace it and never stop experimenting because as you once said, art comes out of experimentation! Keep it up! And it's good for every single one of you reading this ;)
Always appreciate you sharing your experiences/knowledge. Looking forward to your next video.
Sean, took a lot from your episodes! Thanks! Amazing how you manage to combine tech and Inspiration where the latter always is more relevant.
note i am really new to photography, still taking courses, I have taken 8 pictures,plus drone photos, a few cell phone. but you are my kind of photographer, you have the ideas i see, I'm not doing this for weddings,or portraits, i love buildings,landscapes,animals,big trucks,etc..you are the first i have heard about street photography, before you said anything I had in my head I don't care if everyone is better at it than me,take a lot of photos and choose the ones you like, you can hear it from your voice you really are a photographer enjoying walking around taking photos the planning,etc.. keep the videos coming, even if someone don't like your photos (which i do) its your story..i get down sometimes cause i have a 80 hr job,and i have a lot to learn,i'm still discovering more things..
Thank you Sean. It is so encouraging to see that even the great photographers have a low hit to high shot ratio. I need reminding of this after I take a hundred shots and come home with nothing great. Your videos are all so well made and inspiring, moving even. Keep up the great work!!
Great ! Thank you for your really useful and high-quality teachings!
Always can't wait for your videos!! Love seeing the process you go threw..Love your work, thanks for sharing!!! Cheers!
thank you very much for sharing your thought process.
Excellent video! Thank you Sean!
Really interesting vlog, it’s great to hear everyone’s back story as to how they got the shot, however seeing it with a contact sheet is even better. Great work Sean.
Seeing the photos that 'didn't work' is incredibly motivational. It shows, just as you said, that there's no point'n'shoot but rather a trial and error process.
Reassuring and inspiring. I love those final images!
THANK YOU for this episode. So open and unguarded. Totally resonated with my photographic journey....
Great video, Sean. A nuts-and-bolts video that really delivers. Well done and thanks.
Fabulous, great BTS for all of us to learn from. Good job Sean
Great video Sean! Not only was it reassuring for photographers to not be put off by seeing others post great photo as if they're "first tries", it was also interesting to see how you go about choosing your finals.
Great video... nice to see the process.. it’s good to see that you just take shots because it’s fun to do so..
Thank you for sharing your creative thought and process. As an amateur film photographer I have found so meaningful your choices of taking frames for mental notes, and how they serve a purpose in your creative process. It makes me think how I can employ a similar strategy, and whether I need to be a hunter or fisher to achieve my final vision.
Wow! I really liked this a lot Sean. Being new to photography this took the pressure off of thinking I'm failing if I come home after a day of shooting and nothing great to show for it. Your videos are truly inspiring and motivational, thank you.
Sean, Thanks for that.
I like to take photos of what I find interesting. And often I get demoralised by my lack of creativity.
So a bit of an inspirational piece this, for me. I like a lot of your photos so I am inspired by your “failures”.
“……1% inspiration and 99% perspiration” as someone more creative than me once said 😊
A great book - I got it a few months ago and it does make you appreciate the process of creating a great composition and how my images evolve from seeing a potential scene in to a final image.
I like all those photos, you can notice that you are a perfectionist
Your videos are always so informative. Love them all
Nice one Sean, really love your video and the explanation of the hunter and fisherman, great work as always.
Your work is amazing !!! I just started back in being interested in photography/videography. Everything you said made so much sense and it caused me to stop and think about what I am looking for in any image. Thank you for sharing your thoughts!!!
Another piece of inspiration for those of us who wonder at the images of the masters. I adopted a philosophy a while ago of 20 crap photos a day and this has helped me to learn to see potential even if at the end of it nothing is shared. It’s the process for me not necessarily the result
Lovely advice. Thank you. I enjoyed seeing the process.
Sean, I love your work. And it's very inspiring. Thank you
Wonderful video.. thank you for sharing beautifully done
Fabulous video, so helpful and encouraging.Thanks for sharing how you create your images.
Inspiring stuff. Love the “looking for light” approach , it definitely suites me.
I am going to try this fisherman approach in Kings lynn.
Love the use of shadows.
MJ
Have this book too. It's defiantly a great book that inspires and teaches photographers a lot by showing what those great photographers were thinking and under what conditions when they took those photos. This is a book that can be studied for good
I've stumbled onto your videos. I really like the focus on process, especially in this one, because it helps me lower expectations. Loved it. I'm a fisherman too. Being an introvert makes it more challenging, but will give it a go once we're out of lockdown again. Cheers.
This was an incredible video Sean! I've always found street photography to be quite difficult and seeing your process was tremendously beneficial. It will help me focus my approach next time I go out. Also, just getting a glimpse into how you think when you're shooting is of tremendous value. Thank you so much for putting the time and effort into creating this video! It was one of the best photography videos I've watched in a long time.
me felt same