A different perspective

“There are things known and there are things unknown, and in between are the doors of perception.” ― Aldous Huxley

Here are some of my photos from this week:

Moroccan Mound close-up

“Look at everything as though you are seeing it either for the first or last time, then your time on earth will be filled with glory.” ― Betty Smith, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn

When have you changed your point of view or perspective?

Do you prefer a close up view — or looking at the big picture?

36 thoughts on “A different perspective

  1. Along with great photos we get thought provoking questions …I prefer big picture because I like to see as many sides of an issue as possible. If we are too close we get absorbed in one specific aspect, and while that has its merits, we need to understand what the end game is. It’s sort of like reverse engineering….you know what the end is you just have to get there. As to perspective shift ..always

  2. The new lens opens a new world. Love that perspective EA! There’s a time and place for both the wide view and then the need to focus down to the center. LA applied that concept to life in general and I agree. Each has a place and each POV provides its own set of information to fill in the whole.

    • Yes, I completely agree. We need the close up look as well as the big picture in life. I have only used the new lens twice, but am looking forward to discovering that new world.

  3. Beautiful photos! I appreciate close-ups more as I age and my eyesight loses its sharp focus. Your photos bring out the magic I don’t necessarily see anymore (like the cob web). But in life, I’m the opposite. I get involved and drill down and I can get buried in details. It is refreshing when I remember to come up for air, step back, and look at how one whole thing compliments another. I think troublesome details disappear in the beauty of a big picture.

  4. I have a Minolta X-370 (not a digital) that I have had for 30 years, and my Macro is my favorite because it gives you control of distance (blurry background, sharp foreground). I also have an array of Cokin filters that take the photos to a whole new level. I do not even know if they make Cokin filters anymore. Anyway, you will have fun using your new lens as you discover all it’s capabilities.

    • Thank you! I think Mom would be smiling. She liked to take photos, but after I took a year of photo journalism classes at the UW, I introduced her to the professor. He encouraged her to take his classes. He was one of those special professors who took an interest in his students. He taught us so much about the process in the dark room as well as taking photos. Mom ended up putting a dark room in our basement.

  5. I love the close ups and the bigger view. Lovely photos!! You’re right, perspective is everything—in photography and in life.

    • Thank you. When I had the idea of taking the distance and close-ups for this post, I hadn’t connected it to life. But after ithe page was laid out, there it was!

  6. I think that most of the times when I radically changed my perspective, pot was involved. I like to look at small things close up, like a drop of water through a microscope. Usually, though, I like to look at the big picture.

    • Thanks. I’m hoping to get my close-ups sharper and in better focus. The class is online, probably zoom. I picked a professor who was rated highly by students, but also has a career in photography and is well known.

  7. Enjoy the class and playing with the new lens! Both perspectives are important. When I’m identifying plants, I have to get really close up, including magnification. But I’m a bigger picture person more often. I read multiple books at once and find wonderful juxtapositions of ideas and fun coincidences.

    • I am looking forward to a refresher course in photography. It’s been since college that I had my last photography class. I agree that we need to have a close-up perspective as well as be far enough away to see the big picture. I used to read multiple books at once, but if I find a book I really like, I read it through without reading anything else.

  8. Love these pictures Elizabeth. I’m sure after your class these would be even better.
    Taking a step back has always made things clearer for me. Seeing the bigger picture.

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