Many times while traveling, people have an opportunity to do something special. This could be anything from a great restaurant to a sail on a schooner. I had the opportunity to do the latter this past week and it was a great experience!
Right away I decided to shoot it as a story for this article.
The rules are pretty simple.
Wide, medium, and tight images
Don’t forget the details
Have a beginning and end
With these rules guiding me I made about 250 images while on a community sail aboard the schooner Adventure out of the port of Gloucester, MA. It’s a great time and the passengers get to help raise the sails!
The action onboard started right away as we left the dock. The crew was busy pulling the dinghy tender aboard and as we got further out the passengers and crew pulled the mainsail up together. Then we put the U.S. flag up and we were off and running without the engine on. With a slight heel to starboard and a good breeze of about 10kts we flew along at 6.5 miles an hour.
So you see by adding a few simple rules to your visual story telling you can make your travel stories more interesting for your viewers!
A couple of weeks ago a student of mine from New Jersey discovered something she did not know she had. A talent for capturing personality. The student, Lisa Olsen, was up in Gloucester for a three day Cape Ann Photo Tours experience. On our first day after a beautiful sunrise we headed over to Rockport for the morning ritual of lobstermen leaving the harbor. As it happens quite often when traveling we stopped to talk with one of them, “Gussy”. He is quite a character and talked with us for a few minutes about his bait and what the herring gulls dislike. As I talked with Gussy, Lisa was busy making shots of his many animated expressions.
As you can see the name of Gussy’s boat is “Gussy’s Girls”. The light was beautiful in the early morning and Lisa came up with some great shots. What she did not know was that she was telling a story with each image.
As Gussy got ready to climb down the ladder to his dinghy he motioned to the gulls as they flew by saying “not today, I have salted herring” because you see herring gulls hate anything salted.
Gussy was still talking and laughing with us as he sculled out to his boat using an oar that was held together with duck tape. You have to love his self made work dinghy, no oar locks and only a notch in the back to scull with.
As he got farther out to his boat we moved to an area where we could watch him go out for his day of lobstering.
The perfect shot to end this little story as he heads out for a day on Sandy Bay. Travel story telling photography does not have to be extensive it just needs to have the small pieces that pull it together. A beginning, (character intro), a middle (anchor images that pull your story together), and an end (an image that pulls it all together). Lisa has done that with five images. Short stories like this are perfect for adding to your travel book at the end of a photography trip.
Traveling to a new location can be exciting and overwhelming at the same time. Recently I had a client in from New Jersey and she was very excited for her photographic adventure. Cape Ann is not new to her but she was still a bit overwhelmed by the beauty this location offers. This was a three day excursion but she had some things in mind that she wanted to capture.
This was a key to making her tour work as well as it did. I wanted to start off with something fun and easy so sunrise was a great choice and Good Harbor Beach came through like it usually does with a beautiful sunrise. A photographic nugget if there ever was one.
The rest of the morning on our first day came easily as we moved over to Rockport and ran into Gussy the lobsterman. A great character who explained his bait and how the lobstering would go for the day. My client did a great job of photographing him and telling a little story (another post on story telling while traveling will feature her photos). Gussy was an incredible nugget!
I felt it was important to look for different things so we started trying out different compositions of interesting subjects. Shooting through this window while shading the camera made for an interesting image.
Looking at things differently can be fun! You just need to think differently when looking for interesting subjects. Another nugget!
I love this lobster shack as it has a great sign in it along with buoy’s on the outside and traps next to it. The entrance is even more interesting but we have shot it before. A nugget for sure!
One of the things my client was hoping for was some fog. On the second day we found some and I made this photo while I was waiting for her.
An unexpected nugget.
The next day we headed over to Rocky Neck to see what we could find and came across this old rusty bike against a green background. Wow, what a find!
Photographic nuggets seem to jump out at you when you slow down and walk about! We shot every angle of this bike – close, far way, you name it every angle.
Day three was rainy with thunder storms here and there.
We headed over to the Essex Shipbuilding Museum and looking for more nuggets! The rain had stopped and the sun was peaking through here and there so the contrast with everything wet was awesome! Nuggets everywhere!
These dories all lined up created an interesting composition with the Burnham shipyard in the background!
On the last day in the afternoon we dodged some rain drops again and looked for some great compositions at Granite Pier in Rockport. I knew that traps, buoy’s and other assorted fishing gear is in abundance there so we headed over for more nuggets.
The use of a ultra wide 15mm was the key to making this shot work. Very cool!
Then we ended our three day adventure with an appropriate sunset at Cambridge Beach in Annisquam. It was a little disappointing but certainly not bad and still a nugget.
Finding the photographic nuggets is what makes any photographic trip worthwhile. Make time to explore and they will show themselves to you. Don’t rush about trying to fit everything in. Concentrate on a few areas and really work them in the best light possible. Nuggets don’t appear at 12 noon!