| | Why… PhotoBen750?
by: Ben Greer
| This
is just the beginning… For many of you my passion for photography may
be new to you, but I have been in love with the camera for the longest
time. Growing up I would usually prefer to be the one taking the
pictures rather than having my picture taken. |
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As a young child I did not have much money so I was limited to basic bottom barrel point and shoots and disposable |
| cameras.
Not having much money this also made the process of getting my picture
developed difficult. For many years I just kept the spent film in hopes
that one day, before it went bad that, I would get it developed. |
A
major turning point in my life that sent me down this road of photo
passion was the day my uncle Dennis Baunach gave me his old Pentax
K1000. This was around the end of my sophomore
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| year
in high school just before we took a family trip to Europe. At that
time I did not realize what importance this camera might play in the
development of my talent. Even though my uncle had owned this camera
for about 25 years prior to him giving it to me the Pentax K1000 is a
classic camera that is still used by many photogs. |
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The Pentax was my first real SLR camera. It had all the manual features a beginner could want and a few auto function that |
| were
new back when the camera was originally purchased. It came with a black
leather caring case designed to hold the camera, film, filter, lenses,
flash, and a battery operated auto shooter. Back then I had little
knowledge on how any of it worked or what it meant to adjust shutter
and aperture settings. |
To
get me started my uncle showed me how to read the built in light meter,
focus the camera and basic adjustment to the shutter and
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| aperture. Off I went to discover the world through its glass eye interpretation. |
| I
would go to all kinds of places taking picture of just about anything.
I even got into taking black and white images with the Kodak Tmax film.
At the time black and white was not easy for me to get developed.
Unless you knew how to it yourself you had |
|
to
find a shop that worked with black and white. You couldn’t just drop it
off at Costco or any old photo store and it was also twice as expensive
to develop. I would often just take the pictures and keep the |
| For
years I continued taking pictures some film would get developed but
most would just get added to the collection. In 1999 when I was
preparing to move to California Anselmo Villinueva, a good friend of
mine, discover that I had all this undeveloped film saved up. He said
that I should think about getting it developed before it goes bad. I
told him that I could not really afford to do it, but I really wanted
to see what picture I had taken. |
| He
offered to drop it off to Costco for me and pay for the development. I
could not believe it. There were over 20 roles of film. This was a good
chunk of change that I will forever be thankful |
|
| for.
Once they were developed I began to see all the moments from the past
come to life. It was like opening a time capsule. The subject matter
was so varied and spanned over many, many years. It brought back lots
of great memories. |
|
Many
of the pictures were poor in quality and not as nice as I would have
hoped, but the real excitement came when I would find the outstanding |
| shots.
I did not know much about photography when I started, but I had an eye
to appreciate what I saw. Many of my first images may not have been in
focus or the shutter stayed open too long, but the picture would have a
story. |
I
am not sure who coined the phrase “A picture is worth a thousand
words,” but I see the art in this statement. When I take a photo it is
almost like I am writing a poem. When you write a poem you are using
words to
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|
| express
ideas that may not exist in the tangible world. To do this, you must
attempt to capture as much of that idea and express it words that best
represent your thought as a vision understandable in another persons
mind. |
|
Seeing
still images like poetry allows me to expand the context for which an
image has meaning to me. Much like the ability to express a complex
story with the added ability to stretch time and partially recreate |
| a moment of the past. Using imagery of elements that all real tangible existence has long left the present. |
Some time in early 2003 I got my first digital camera. A Nikon CoolPix 4300 with a 4.1 megapixel CCD.
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| With
the new found freedom of not needing to go anywhere special or wait for
development I began to rediscover my photo passion. I must have taken
several thousand images before I upgraded to my current camera in the
spring of 2004. |
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A Fuji Finepix S7000 6.2 megapixel SuperCCD with the ability to interpolate up to 12.3 megapixel. This camera has been |
| very
reliable and has many great features. My digital image collection is
now in the range of 15-20 thousand high resolution images. That would
be the equivalent of about 470-625 rolls of film, 32 exposures each. |

PhotoBen750 Links:
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Take Care,
Ben
(PhotoBen750)
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| | Posted 7/24/2008 9:14 PM - 71 Views - 0 eProps - 0 comments
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