6. Challenge yourself by taking new classes.
A great way to expand your abilities and get fresh enthusiasm is to take a class. It doesn’t even have to be a photography class, but perhaps sewing or art or literature--anything that grabs your interest and moves you forward. If you are learning in one area your enthusiasm and quest for information and skills will carry over into your photographic world.
I love teaching photography and as such, have created my own new challenge. I’m putting together a new class for one of my more advanced students. This Independent Photo Study class incorporates the project or venue chosen by the student. It’s an intense student self-directed course, where I guide, challenge and critique her work and try to show her how to cut through the emotional tangle (“but I love that shot” … my words not hers) to learn to self critique effectively. She has chosen as her subject “Street Photography” and we are both excited about this new venture and the opportunities it presents.

Copyright © Noella Ballenger
I don’t do much photography in my home town, but I accepted a challenge to do more city images since I have an Independent Study student who is doing street photography. I do love architecture and wanted to twist it around to be unusual. The subject of building reflections have caught my eye and it’s turning into a really fun personal project.
7. Challenge yourself with trying new formats.
A year or so ago, I got to play with a friend’s camera that was converted to infrared by removing something in the sensor that normally blocks the infrared waves. It was so much fun that I took one of my older digital SLR cameras and made it into an infrared digital camera as well. I’m just beginning to learn this art form and I’m nuts about it.
The way I approach anything new is to play with it until I feel comfortable and then I get serious. So I took that camera with me on last year’s trip in the Canadian Rockies. Among other things, I was shooting out of the car window as we were driving along--just being silly and playing around. What I discovered was by playing with that infrared camera, I began to “see” better and my regular work improved by leaps and bounds. I stripped away color by photographing with infrared. What I discovered was that I could now see the “bones” of the composition and make changes in some of my compositions in my regular camera and come out with some pretty dramatic and exciting images.

Copyright © Noella Ballenger
These lily pads in the lake we found near Revelstoke National Park in British Columbia became stepping stones to seeing the general composition of the shot when captured in infrared.
I
still don’t know much as much as I would like about infrared, but I will
“brush up” on it before my next trip because I won’t leave that camera
behind. Also, Apogee Photo has published a couple of articles (found in the
archives) and I’ll read those before I leave on my next trip. Who knows, I
might even find another new way to challenge myself into making more dynamic
and exciting images!
Note: Switching a SLR camera to a digital infrared camera is not inexpensive, but as an alternative, check in your camera’s manual to see if your SLR has a way to shoot black and white images. It won’t be quite the same, but it will help you change your thinking and help you see how to improve your color photographic compositions. Go ahead, give it a try!

Copyright © Noella Ballenger 2010
The forest floor took on a whole new look when shot with the converted infra red camera. I really like the soft look of the leaves. Learning new skills or new ways of doing things is a challenge, but I’m up for it. Are you?







