family photos

Almost all my shots this week were on film, (I'm hoping to have some rolls to send off on Monday.) and since I didn't want to dribble out just a solo 365 shot or two, I thought I'd share some photos from a project we did last month. Hey look! It's me!

My friend Jackie suggested (or was it commanded?) that I do a family portrait. This after I realized it had been almost a year since I'd been in a pic with my people. And since Christmas was coming up, we thought we'd do some for our family. After the initial fiddling with focus, it was quite easy and even fun when we got the dogs involved. Fun for us, maybe.

So I've decided to do a family portrait once a month for the upcoming year. I'd planned to take my pictures last weekend, but some things didn't work out, and now that leaves me with tomorrow. There are pros and cons to this. The pro is that I'm getting my hair cut today. The con is that I'd like to do it outside in front of our shed again and the high is supposed to be 36ยบ. Wish me luck!

batting practice, lessons in film

Pentax K1000, Kodak Ultramax 400

Pentax K1000, Kodak Ultramax 400

Pentax K1000, Kodak Ultramax 400

Pentax K1000, Kodak Ultramax 400

Pentax K1000, Kodak Ultramax 400

Pentax K1000, Kodak Ultramax 400

Pentax K1000, Kodak Ultramax 400

Pentax K1000, Kodak Ultramax 400

Pentax K1000, Kodak Ultramax 400

Pentax K1000, Kodak Ultramax 400

Pentax K1000, Kodak Ultramax 400

Pentax K1000, Kodak Ultramax 400

Pentax K1000, Kodak Ultramax 400

Pentax K1000, Kodak Ultramax 400

So I've had a mantra or two for myself as I walked down this new path with film. One mantra, hold it lightly, I use for a lot of things. A lot. And I'll circle back around to it another day. When I forget it, things go screwy. But the other mantra is that this, all this here in the beginning, is batting practice.

Cal has hitting lessons twice a week, so batting practice is a common, actual thing around here, not just an analogy. It's an easy leap for me to take. Easier for me to imagine myself in batting practice than say, piano lessons. We like music, but no one's taking lessons or practicing scales in this house. Neel's picking the ELO station on Pandora or always turning to the Grateful Dead station on our Sirius doesn't count.

And I guess to me, batting practice means doing what you do, over and over again. Taking the balls that are pitched to you and trying to hit them. Standing in the same stance, over and over, trying to perfect technique. There's no game pressure. There's no one really watching. Just me and the pitches thrown my way.

The other key, I think, is low expectations. Just shooting to learn, and in order to do that, I used cheap, consumer grade film (purchased and then developed at my local drugstore) and tried to shoot all the things I generally shoot. Fast balls, curve balls, knuckle ball, slider. The ocean. My river. Food. Flowers. My family (beagle). (I did take a lot of pictures of my people too, but that's a post for another day.) 

I've had a few set-backs recently. It was inevitable, I guess. And I do want to talk about them here, because, as usual, the things I'm learning here apply to so many parts of my life, not just photography or learning a new skill. And when I felt that set back, what did I do? Got back to batting practice. Swing after swing, over and over again. Learning to read the balls as they come my way. Shot after shot. Learning to understand film and light and how they all work together. Learning different film stocks and meter readings and taking notes.

At my photo group last week, we talked about what personal projects we're taking on to help us grow this year. Big picture (see what I did there?), of course I'm tackling film. But I have smaller, specific projects on deck too. I've been trying to figure how to incorporate film into those projects, and I keep coming back to just shoot more film. A lot of women I know have the goal of a roll a week, and that seems really laudable. Maybe even doable. It's all about batting practice, baby.