I found a brilliant post entry while searching for some infos on photos in notebooks. I came across with this wonderful site & I fell in love instantly. I never knew a photographer actually keep a notebook with themselves all the time whenever & wherever <singing like Shakira> And here is a note on why we should keep a photography notebook especially if you proclaimed as one. This is suitable to any of us that is starting out as a photographer. I hope we can be successful in this field :D.
This is a reblog & taken from Bumbles and Light. Credit to the owner.
Before digital cameras, photographers would keep
notebooks to help them remember the various settings that they used for each
exposure on a roll of film. They could develop the film and then go back to
compare their notes with the outcome, deciding which settings worked, which did
not and how they could either emulate the results in another shoot or what they
should change for next time. With digital photography, we only have to look at
our exif data on the computer to reveal our settings for each photograph, so
why should we still keep a photography notebook?
It is still important that we
have somewhere to make notes and record reminders. I prefer
using a paper notebook because that’s how I work best, I enjoy writing by hand
and having something physical to refer to, but you could keep notes on your
smartphone using an app or any other electronic device you choose… although I
find it’s best to use something that you can carry with you at all times. The
notebooks I like to use have plain paper as opposed to ruled lines. I prefer
this so that I have space to make drawings and sketches of ideas if I need to
and so that I have room to make notes on previous ideas. If you go for a paper
notebook, choose something sturdy as you will be using it and carrying it around
often.
Notebook. No
photographer should be without one!
- Ansel Adams
Having a notebook also means that you have something
to refer back to when feeling uninspired. Hopefully the wonderful ideas you
recorded on previous days will serve to inspire you on days when you may be
feeling less creative.
What to Write in your Photography
Notebook
Anything you like.
Use your notebook to keep track of those elusive
concept ideas that you come up with in the dead of night, just
as you begin to fall asleep. Ideas seem to strike at the most inopportune of
times, I’ll find myself scribbling in my notebook while I’m waiting outside my
son’s school for him to finish for the day, as I’m out working/dog walking, or
as I’m brewing the morning’s coffee.
You can use your notebook
to make a note of awesome locations you might see
when you’re out without your camera, or perhaps in a car or on public transport
and unable to stop. Locations that might work better at a different time of
day, or a different season. Make notes and come back to them.
You can keep magazine clippings in your notebook to
inspire you. Posing ideas from fashion magazines, interesting compositions,
lighting or just generally inspirational images. Attach them to your pages and
write notes alongside them.
As you’re editing, if you find an image that didn’t
quite work but you’d still like to try and re-take it you can make a note of
it. The location, why you think it didn’t work out the first time, ideas to try
next time.
Keep notes of things
you learn while reading or watching instructional videos and might
like to try out yourself. You could be learning to use artificial lighting for
the first time, use your notebook to sketch out lighting setups or to write
ideas.
Eventually, your photography notebook will become
almost like a journal of your art and thought processes. These notebooks are
good to hold onto, as you would a regular journal, to look back on. You might
find yourself inspired years later by an idea you scribbled down hurriedly
while standing in line to pay for your groceries.
Notebook. No photographer should be without one!