del.ia.hoo
So maybe now that Yahoo scooped up del.icio.us, I can get gre.gario.us going again.
I’ve been posting a bunch of photos on facebook today, and it’s made me think about my growing interest in photographing people. I’ve always been more of a landscape photographer; I like going places, seeing things, and taking pictures of them. Lately, though, I’ve begun to value taking pictures of my friends (and as a lot of my friends can attest, I can make people very annoyed by always asking for photos).
Photos tell a lot about a person. It seems as though most people stop the analysis of any kind of casual portrait photo at “so THAT’S what s/he looks like” (or “whoa, s/he looks really good/hot/etc.”). What I’ve come to find, though, is that the real value in photographs of people lies beyond the first glance.
You can tell a lot about a person by his or her surroundings, whether it’s people, things, or places. First, there’s a lot of materialism in photographs. Clothing and makeup tells a lot, of course, about a person’s view of looking pristine (you can often tell a model – or someone who would want to be one – by how they wear casual clothing, and the amount of makeup they wear). While some spend an amazing amount of effort to always look “perfect”, others really just don’t care. Often, I find, it’s the people that don’t emphasize their looks that help create the most interesting – and beautiful – photographs.
Another tell-tale sign of personality is the average number of people in a group of pictures. Facebook is a really interesting place to study this; some people take the majority of photos as a single self-portrait. Others have a very large majority of pictures where they are surrounded by three, four, or ten of their friends. (You can also tell a lot about a person by seeing how they interact with their friends, even in the single shutter frames of a photo.)
I really could look at photographs of people all day. I could also talk about photographs of people all day. I should stop.
By the way -

That’s what I’m talkin’ ’bout.
Over the past couple of years, I’ve been constantly trying to find a common thread in my photography – a single characteristic that defines my primary area of interest. Surprisingly, I’ve found that looking at photography by other people allows me to critique and analyze my own work more easily. I’ve become addicted to Flickr‘s wonderful interestingness page, and it’s lead me to build a quickly expanding favorites page. By showing all of these favorite photos on a single screen, it’s fairly easy to notice some commonalities. Take these four wonderful, Creative Commons-licensed pictures, for example:
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(l-r: “Vincent at the Frozen Foods Aisle” by carlosluis, “Chihiro” by fofurasfelinas, “DSCN0885” by tiswango, “Ambassador Bridge” by redmann)
As it turns out, I have many photographic interests. My classmates in my senior year photography class actually commented that the work I did before the class was much more varied than the norm; most of my peers had specialized in one certain area. For that particular class’s project, I turned to my interest in geometry. Here are some of the common threads I’ve discovered:
The combination of two or more of the above characteristics leads to interesting results. Detail combined with people (children) or animals leads to a very apparent sense of intimacy, for example. Is there a single photo that could combine all of the characteristics above?
If there is, you’ll probably find it in my Flickr favorites soon.
How well do you think those five points cover my interests? Check out my Flickr photos, or check out this little site I made.
I love good advertising. Some companies just always seem to come through with the best ads to market their products – and of course, Apple‘s on the list. Lately I’ve been hooked on what I think is the best ad they’ve done within the last few years: an old iPod ad with posters, “Ride” by The Vines, and dancing. To me it just encompasses everything great about having an iPod.
Watch it over at the mactv videocast.
I’d been thinking about making a local store inventory search thingee for a while. Google beat me to it with what’s basically Froogle Local. Search by your ZIP and see nearby stores with the item. Best of all, any merchant can upload their inventory through Google Base.
Brilliant.
Our Thanksgiving trip to the coast (an hour away) this year will be one to remember…
8 AM: Blue skies in Bangor.
10:30 AM: Moderate snow on the way down to the coast.
1:30 PM: Heavy rain on the coast.
2:15 PM: Thunder and lightning.
2:45 PM: Blue skies.
I voted today.
I’ll be the first to say that America has one of the best election processes in the world, and our democratic federal republic (most of the time) works really well.
I’d like to know what you think. If you voted, what do you think could be improved about the system? If you didn’t, why didn’t you?
I think the biggest improvement for me would be more information about issues and candidates (especially local ones). I walked into the polling place without a clue about any of the local elections. I ended up leaving the questions blank, but it would’ve really been nice if I could have made a good decision about who I should support.
By this time next year I’ll do something about it.
I’ve been thinking for a while that my blog has become too fragmented; I might talk about a tech issue and then jump right back into a simple personal post. I know some other people have thought this, too, so I’ve decided to fork my blog into two separate ones. From now on, tech stuff will be covered on the semsym blog. Have fun, and don’t forget to leave some comments on both.
Take 5 photos that summarize who you are.
Today’s morning shower thought: what five photos could I take that would give someone else a fairly clear impression of who I was and what was important to me? I realize that this task sounds like a horrible combination of a middle school project and a LiveJournal quiz, but I’d be interested to see how it turns out.
If you want to try, post the links to your five (from Flickr or anywhere else) as a comment.