• Members 523 posts
    April 26, 2025, 4:51 p.m.

    Welcome to the Weekly Black and White Photography Thread # 13

    We’re dedicated to fostering discussions about Black and White photography. This open peer-to-peer forum allows critical feedback on images, leading to discussions on techniques, styles, interpretation, and storytelling. The first few weeks response has been outstanding - keep them coming.

    It’s easy - To participate: post an image or essay with a title, short description, and explanation. All comments must include the image or essay as a quote. Replies may or may not include quotes.

    THREAD GUIDELINES:
    1. This thread is for learning about Black and White photography.
    2. Post one image or photo essay for comments.
    3. Entries can be single images or short photo essays (3 to 10 connected images that tell a story).
    4. Give your entry a clear title and explain why you took it and the story it tells.
    5. Provide constructive feedback on others’ images/essays.
    6. Go beyond simple praise or dismissal.
    7. Explain why you like an image or essay.
    8. Negative feedback is welcome (be polite, honest, and constructive).
    9. Stay on topic and avoid politics or distractions.

    We refine our skill-craft through feedback - Analyzing prints pinned on the virtual wall is our approach, but discussions of styles and techniques are also acceptable. While most images are captured digitally, Black and White film can also discussed. The focus is on image.

    Post a photo or photo essay and get comments and feedback. In return, give honest but constructive opinions of others’ images. A simple “like” is insufficient. There are multiple levels of feedback: composition, technique, emotion and storytelling, etc.
    What caught your eye about an image and why? What draws you in and what distracts you? What changes would you make? Does the photographer tell their story? Does the image communicate their viewpoint or emotion? As W. Eugene Smith said, “A photo is a small voice, at best, but sometimes – just sometimes – one photograph or a group of them can lure our senses into awareness.” Does the image meet Smith’s criteria?

    Explore the image in your head, considering composition, perspective, toning, balance, exposure, and tonality. Consider the story, emotion or opinion the artist is trying to communicate. Provide feedback.

    Downloading and reposting - (please note: clear instructions are required).
It’s often challenging to verbalize useful comments about images. Instead, it’s easier to “show.” Unless the original poster specifically states otherwise, participants are free to download, alter, and repost images in replies to express their analysis and critique. The reposted image may remain permanently or be removed after a short period. Downloaded and altered images shall not be used for other purposes or uploaded elsewhere.

    Encouragement - When I first pinned a print on the cork-board for the professor and class to analyze, I was apprehensive. However, it proved to be an effective way to learn and develop my skills and vision. Well reasoned analysis and comments aid the artist in improving their vision, skill, and style. The goal is to promote and encourage people to enhance their artistic vision and skill in Black and White Photography by providing constructive feedback. General feedback is also welcome. Sharing techniques for capturing or processing images that aid in creating good Black and White images or photo essays is appreciated in replies.

    Why focus on Black and White - As Elliott Erwitt said, “Color is descriptive. Black and White is interpretive.” It’s an abstraction that simplifies photography by focusing on composition, forms, shapes, tonality, textures, and emotions. Ansel Adams famously said, “You don’t take a photograph, you make a photograph.”

    Clyde Butcher talks about the hundreds of photographers who flock to Inspiration Point in Yosemite National Park for the “golden hour.” However, the composition at sunrise is poor. For Black and White, it’s not about the color of the light, but the quality of the light. Ansel Adams arrived midmorning when the light was “right” to produce his iconic images. His iconic book, “Yosemite and the Range of Light,” had a significant impact on conservation and environmental movements in the West. It also attracts thousands of photographers each year to capture the “Range of Light.”

    clydebutcher.com

    Nick Ut’s “Napalm Girl” captured the horrors of the Vietnam War and profoundly impacted the United States. Stripped of distractions, the image exposed the terror in the children’s faces, prompting critical questioning of government actions. W. Eugene Smith’s “Minamata” warned the world. It exposed a corporation poisoning water and killing residents, highlighting the suffering of the Minamata community for profit. William Henry Jackson’s photographs convinced Congress to preserve Yellowstone as the first national park, leading to the creation of the National Park Service and commitment to wild land preservation.

    aboutphotography.blog/blog/the-terror-of-war-nick-uts-napalm-girl-1972
    www.magnumphotos.com/arts-culture/society-arts-culture/w-eugene-smith-minamata-warning-to-the-world/
    www.pbagalleries.com/first-photographic-images-of-yellowstone/

    Black and White strips away distractions to expose emotions. It tells unique stories in various photographic genres, from landscapes to social documentaries to portraiture. Check out Annie Leibovitz’s Black and White work.

    blog.artsper.com/en/a-closer-look/why-artists-choose-black-and-white-photography/
    fstoppers.com/fashion/why-its-still-important-shoot-black-and-white-48141
    www.designspiration.com/save/1600176374707/

    Another resource is the “Daybooks of Edward Weston,” though dated, still relevant.

    Additional Resources - It is encouraged to discuss additional resources on Black and White photography in posts, whether in your images or commenting on others’ when those resources aid in the goals of the thread.

    Growing Together - The Black and White thread focuses on growth and learning together. Be active, honest, and respectful.

  • Members 474 posts
    April 27, 2025, 1:08 a.m.

    Shoppers

    L1010536.jpg

    L1010536.jpg

    JPG, 4.0 MB, uploaded by Kumsal on April 27, 2025.

  • Members 2062 posts
    April 28, 2025, 1:15 a.m.

    Staircase.
    Stairs.jpg

    Stairs.jpg

    JPG, 946.7 KB, uploaded by MikeFewster on April 28, 2025.

  • Members 2099 posts
    April 28, 2025, 1:18 a.m.

    Every few years we get flood conditions in low lying areas and I get a chance to make photos in the swamp that turn out like this. This one is from a few years ago but conditions are looking like we may have a chance this year so I'm going to scout tomorrow. If it's a little visually disorienting, that's the point.

    dambirdclass%20(51%20of%2054).jpeg

    dambirdclass%20(51%20of%2054).jpeg

    JPG, 6.4 MB, uploaded by minniev on April 28, 2025.

  • Members 523 posts
    April 29, 2025, 4:40 p.m.

    Nice catch and interesting reflections.

  • Members 523 posts
    April 29, 2025, 4:42 p.m.

    Mike, again a wonderful geometric design. This is reminiscent of an Escher.

  • Members 715 posts
    April 29, 2025, 7:33 p.m.

    The National Forum of Music, Wroclaw

    I enjoyed the interplay of rectangles, light, shade, transparency and reflections of the main concert hall and the glass cube covering the stairs and lift to the underground car park.

    H4189189-SFx.jpg

    H4189189-SFx.jpg

    JPG, 998.5 KB, uploaded by PeteS on April 29, 2025.

  • Members 2062 posts
    April 30, 2025, 1:08 p.m.

    The staircase and lighting had nothing to do with Escher. However. It was part of a staircase at the National Gallery of Victoria and an Escher collection was the main display at the time. It seems likely that I was therefore seeing the world through some kind of Escher filter when I saw the stairs.

  • Members 474 posts
    May 1, 2025, 1:23 a.m.

    In my opinion, there's far too much foreground in this photo.
    The subjects are quite far away.
    Would cropping to 16:9 help?

  • Members 474 posts
    May 1, 2025, 1:26 a.m.

    I kind of like this photo, but at the same time it seems overloaded and restless.

  • Members 474 posts
    May 1, 2025, 1:33 a.m.

    Sorry, Mike, but this whole staircase thing hasn't interested me for a long time.
    But, well done!

  • Members 474 posts
    May 1, 2025, 1:35 a.m.

    I agree with you; I like the photo.

  • Members 523 posts
    May 1, 2025, 2:02 p.m.

    I was in a quandary on how to render this. It was about the street - the humans were "bit players." But relooking at it - maybe the aspect ratio and the amount of
    foreground that encompasses was wrong. How about this.

    Yabor City Trolly_nz85099-20250403-0320 1.jpg

    Yabor City Trolly_nz85099-20250403-0320 1.jpg

    JPG, 2.5 MB, uploaded by tprevatt on May 1, 2025.

  • Members 40 posts
    May 1, 2025, 11:59 p.m.

    Yes I think that is better. I quite like higher aspect ratios when they suit the image like this.

  • Members 2062 posts
    May 2, 2025, 12:59 a.m.

    I vote for the crop as well.'From the shadow clues, it looks like a day shot. In this case I feel it needs to be a little brighter.

  • Members 2062 posts
    May 2, 2025, 1:08 a.m.

    I agree and think Pete's concept came off.
    I'd add another rectangle in the form of a fine line black border. The small figure in the doorway on the left distracts from the rectangles and invites speculation that doesn't feel to me to fit ith the image. There's a discussion going on in C&C about the ompact of humans in an image. Curiously, the reflected humans on the right feel OK to me. Is it possible that reflected humans dont strike us as "real" in the same way?
    As it stands, I'd want to remove the small "real" human and leave the reflections. Anyone else have views on this?

  • Members 523 posts
    May 2, 2025, 1:48 p.m.

    I'm in Ybor City often. Hop on the trolly and can be at the convention center and start of the river walk in a few minutes. This was shot at dusk, the lights are already on. It never really gets dark on 7th Ave - as it is the epicenter of nightlife in Tampa. Every time I have been there in the evening, these two guys are sitting in the same chairs in the same spot in front of the same cigar store sipping on a cuban coffee, enjoying a cigar and chewing the fat. With no indoor smoking in Florida and Ybor City being the old Tampa Cuban cigar district - the sidewalks are set up for those that want to partake of a hand rolled cigar to do so.

    L1001242.jpg

    L1001242.jpg

    JPG, 3.3 MB, uploaded by tprevatt on May 2, 2025.