• Members 464 posts
    April 5, 2025, 8:49 p.m.

    Welcome to the Weekly Black and White Photography Thread # 10

    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 464 posts
    April 5, 2025, 8:52 p.m.

    Rider's Up

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    Keeneland Fall Meet 2016

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    JPG, 3.2 MB, uploaded by tprevatt on April 5, 2025.

  • Members 1933 posts
    April 6, 2025, 1:05 a.m.

    Delta Oracle

    Several springs ago, after a storm, I was driving through the Mississippi delta on Highway 61 (you older folk may remember a music album by that name), when I came upon an area where the highway was submerged as far as I could see. Not only was it submerged, it was rising. This lady was standing alone at the edge of the rising water, looking very serious, so I engaged her in a conversation. She told me a dam had broken upriver, and no one knew exactly how far the flood would go. She pointed out the sandbags at the back of her property, put in earlier that day by the Corps (you can see them behind her). I asked if she was going to stay, or leave. She had a high clearance truck and a place to go, she said, but she wasn't planning to leave. She had stayed through an earlier flood, and water had risen to 5 feet inside her house. Her refrigerator was bobbing in it like a fishing cork, she said, but when the water went down, it worked just fine and was still working. I asked her if she was afraid and she smiled for the first time, "No, the Lord holds me in his two hands like this" and she held out her hands to take mine. I asked to take her photo and she agreed, but made it clear she wouldn't leave her watch-post. I turned around and went back the way I came.

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    export-7.jpg

    JPG, 4.0 MB, uploaded by minniev on April 6, 2025.

  • Members 1937 posts
    April 6, 2025, 5:03 a.m.

    Murano. Italy.

    Murano. Italy.jpg

    Murano. Italy.jpg

    JPG, 1.5 MB, uploaded by MikeFewster on April 6, 2025.

  • Members 464 posts
    April 6, 2025, 1:56 p.m.

    Who you calling old!? 🤣 Who can forget the "Blues Highway" - a.k.a. the birthplace of the Blues. And forget when Bob Dylan's strutted his blues stuff in "Highway 61." Looking at this image I can hear Robert Johnson, John Lee Hooker, Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf and least we not forget B.B. King in the background.

    The image captures the way of life in the Delta. Nice story and nice capture. The square aspect ratio and framing with the two trees set the set the story.

  • Members 464 posts
    April 6, 2025, 1:59 p.m.

    Who goes there. The image makes you wonder why he seems to be peaking around the corner. Nicely done.

  • Members 1258 posts
    April 6, 2025, 2:21 p.m.

    Power and chaos

    dprevived.com/media/attachments/2f/ef/WeNAmyoB4jCTxjNLLgABIVFu3RALycmd550FnX30aYe7YXNIJhiDeBssn7ZuGBHu/dsc-1985e-topazb.jpg

    DSC_1985e topazBW smaller.JPG

    JPG, 2.7 MB, uploaded by Fireplace33 on April 6, 2025.

  • Members 784 posts
    April 6, 2025, 6:26 p.m.

    Nothing says old jeans like a pair of Wranglers

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    Still life on a rainy day

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    Steve Thomas

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    JPG, 206.4 KB, uploaded by stevet1 on April 6, 2025.

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    JPG, 791.8 KB, uploaded by stevet1 on April 6, 2025.

  • Members 464 posts
    April 6, 2025, 9:06 p.m.

    What I like about this image is the conflict between the solid rock and the power of the fluid water. The tonality of the water is very pleasing. What would have been also interesting would have been to take this at a slower shutter speed that would smooth out the water. I would have been an interesting contrast.