
Ted Forbes brings his Master Class Live series to a close by identifying a number of important reminders for amateur and professional photographers:
photographs come from your mind, your talent, your skill level, your experience, your sense of creativity….
…what you are as a photographer is a sum of all your experiences and everything you have done up to this point comprises your skill level.
…the camera doesn’t make images you do
Developing your style as a photographer is:
…an ongoing process…this is something that you get better and better and better and better at, and I think, hopefully, one day you get really good at but it never stops….

Exercise 1: tell a story without words
- identify a story or how-to-series you would like to create
- use your camera to create a series of photographs
- use as many perspectives as possible
- keep it simple
- think about composition, that is how could various elements assist in telling your story
- create a lot of images…15-30+
- edit the series of images
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- identify those that specifically show what you are trying to communicate
- removing those that are not essential in the story’s key points
- edit again to pare the number down to as few as possible. Can you remove all but one and still tell the story?
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The absolute goal of this exercise is to tell a story with one image that interacts with a viewer and evokes an emotional response, a reaction, or a change in perspective, thought, or understanding.

A number of various genres that may inspire you are:
Photographers:
Duane Michals @
http://www.dcmooregallery.com/exhibitions/duane-michals-sequences-and-talking-pictures?view=slider#8
Eadweard Muybridg @
https://www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-britain/exhibition/eadweard-muybridge
Movies and short videos:
Ted Forbes’s Photo Assignment #6
A photo study
a photo study: story photography
Looking forward to your images and thoughts. Let’s tag with #aphotostory.
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