A manual focus portrait of friends at the library

A manual focus portrait of friends at the library

A friendly portrait is My final Photo for May 7, 2013

A friendly portrait is My Final Photo for May 7, 2013

Manual focus required

There is little to say about these two youngsters except they are the best of friends, almost inseparable in their affection for each other.

They are children of families where I tangential knowledge of the parents through people I work with and were at an event in the early evening that I attended.

The mother of the girls wanted a photo of them together and seemed slightly pained that I told her to wait until after the event so I could get them outside for what I knew would be much better than the two of them in a meeting room at the library.

The only camera I had with me was the D5000 with the 18-55mm kit lens and a 50mm f1.8 lens that isn’t designed to autofocus with the D5000. That meant I would have to manual focus at f1.8 to get the photo I wanted and the photo her mother didn’t expect.

A friendly portrait  of two girls

A friendly iPhone portrait of two girls

It is possible to manual focus with the D5000 even with the narrow depth of filed of an f1.8 lens. In the lower left corner is a circular indicator that flashes as you approach optimum focus and glows steady when you are in focus. It works best when you are set to single focus point, especially when your subject is a portrait and you want to focus on the eyes.

All Nikon cameras have this indicator so you can  manually focus any lens. It is indispensable when you are shooting with a lens that requires the camera to have a focus drive motor. The 50mm f1.8 and 85mm f1.8 that I carry do not have the autofocus capability on the D5000 or D3100 I use. They do work on the D300 because it has the focus motor built into the camera.

These two lenses are very popular as a second lens purchase. However, make sure they work in autofocus on your camera or get ready to watch the flashing circle.

No use crying unless you've dropped your ice cream

No use crying unless you've dropped your ice cream

Girls standing next to her spilled ice cream - My Final Photo for May 3, 2013

Girls standing next to her spilled ice cream – My Final Photo for May 3, 2013

Graeters Ice Cream in Uptown Westerville is double test of my strength.

It’s a rare day that I don’t walk or ride my bike past Graeters in Uptown Westerville. It’s rare I stop for a photo although I often step inside to fill a water bottle. The test arrives to see if I can leave without buying ice cream.

When asked I tell people that there is no way I can go home with Graeters on my breath. My family would never forgive me for going without them. Sometimes I fear my family.

Today I shot a photo at Graeters.

Usually the benches out front are filled with kids and their parents  enjoying cones and cups of the sweet creamy confection. It would be easy to photograph a youngster with melted ice cream dripping from their chin or a mom cleaning it away. Those photos are common so I very rarely take time to shoot it. The photo’s storytelling value diminishes because it is so common.

Finding a photo that creates a dialogue is primary to good photography. When I saw this girl wearing pink shoes standing next the spilled and melting teal ice cream covered with sprinkles I knew I had a photo that would create that dialogue.

The conversation may be internal, spoken and heard only by one person. There’s no requirement that it be shared. There’s no need to speak to another person about the conversation. It’s only necessary the photo be the beginning of the conversation.

Common photos aren’t compelling. They don’t have the capability to start a dialogue.