- Joined
- Jul 3, 2004
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- 3,714
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- Here N There
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I guess this is a bit of a whining thread.
My sister just emailed me asking me if I have this and that lens, and that she wants to learn how to take this and that type of photo, followed by a link to a "how-to" book she's probably already ordered.
My sister reads a lot. Her room is full of her books, about religion, politics, economy, finance, culture, philosophy, yoga, cooking, tourism... plus industry technical books that she's involved in.
I'm the opposite. I barely have any books. I do, but certainly not enough to fill a shelf. In fact, my books are all in boxes now. They are full of pictures. Mostly design and auto related. I don't really look at them now since there are tons more on the internet.
Yet I can challenge my sister on any topic of conversation. Well, not really "challenge", but I can go as in-depth as she can.
On the topic of photography, well, this is where I get a little pissed. I have no photography book(except user manuals). I just get that thing in my hands and start using it. When I have a question or want to try new technique, I just find a quick tutorial on the internet and go back out to put it in practice. Philosophy? Culture? Cooking? These are best experienced in practice too! Yes I do refer to sources of information, but they can come from anywhere. I spend time on the web reading through news, tech and auto blogs. I travel, listen, observe, smell and feel. Back to photography, I can explain lots of things to my sister but she never really puts it in practice. So she always asks questions based on what she reads, which means they are full of bad assumptions. This becomes frustrating because she will question my input based on something she's never tried. So what's the point of getting this and that lens if she's going to trust that book more than herself? I think the point is, she's much more willing to invest her efforts on a comfortable couch than getting there under the sun.
Not trying to make sweeping assumption for those who read a lot. I just find that reading is a waste of time if I can be out there to experience the real thing myself. In actual personal experience, I find it far more assuring and meaningful. Of course, things that I cannot do myself, I read about them, but again, not just reading.
My sister just emailed me asking me if I have this and that lens, and that she wants to learn how to take this and that type of photo, followed by a link to a "how-to" book she's probably already ordered.
My sister reads a lot. Her room is full of her books, about religion, politics, economy, finance, culture, philosophy, yoga, cooking, tourism... plus industry technical books that she's involved in.
I'm the opposite. I barely have any books. I do, but certainly not enough to fill a shelf. In fact, my books are all in boxes now. They are full of pictures. Mostly design and auto related. I don't really look at them now since there are tons more on the internet.
Yet I can challenge my sister on any topic of conversation. Well, not really "challenge", but I can go as in-depth as she can.
On the topic of photography, well, this is where I get a little pissed. I have no photography book(except user manuals). I just get that thing in my hands and start using it. When I have a question or want to try new technique, I just find a quick tutorial on the internet and go back out to put it in practice. Philosophy? Culture? Cooking? These are best experienced in practice too! Yes I do refer to sources of information, but they can come from anywhere. I spend time on the web reading through news, tech and auto blogs. I travel, listen, observe, smell and feel. Back to photography, I can explain lots of things to my sister but she never really puts it in practice. So she always asks questions based on what she reads, which means they are full of bad assumptions. This becomes frustrating because she will question my input based on something she's never tried. So what's the point of getting this and that lens if she's going to trust that book more than herself? I think the point is, she's much more willing to invest her efforts on a comfortable couch than getting there under the sun.
Not trying to make sweeping assumption for those who read a lot. I just find that reading is a waste of time if I can be out there to experience the real thing myself. In actual personal experience, I find it far more assuring and meaningful. Of course, things that I cannot do myself, I read about them, but again, not just reading.