Philosophy, Photographs and Puffins

The featured image shows my first attempt at using the Panorama setting on the camera. It just goes to show that a boring photograph is a boring photograph, no matter how you dress it up.

The wheelbarrow is quite interesting, as barrows go, and is a lot easier to use than a conventional  barrow if you have mobility problems. The recycled BBQ/herb planter adds a splash of colour. Apart from that the view from the front door of the container/office/canteen is very dull. Julia has plans for this and I’m hoping to document them over the coming year.

What starts as a dull picture therefore has potential to become an interesting  series of dull pictures., though it would be foolish to ignore the possibility of producing a dull series of dull pictures.

It is likely that in next month’s photo the barrow may have moved, but will that simple change be enough, or will I have to include another item in the picture to ensure  that people keep looking?

I also used the Self Portrait feature. I’m not actually sure what it does. In a break with tradition, I wasn’t wearing my selfie shirt, so maybe it is just a liberating setting to break people out of a rut. It certainly doesn’t make bad haircuts look better. After a few practice shots  I have now learned how to avoid the Fungus the Bogeyman look (wide in the chin and narrow at the top) and can make my head vary in shape quite considerably, but that, again, has nothing to do with the setting, just experimentation.

They say the camera never lies, which is true, as the camera, philosophically speaking, cannot form the intention to mislead. It can, however, give a false picture, depending on the angle you take your selfie from. I won’t show any of these shots as you suffered enough last time, so here’s another Puffin. People like Puffins, and it gives me a chance to work three P’s into the title (though a Phalarope would have fitted better). At times they can look very sad. This one appears to be thinking of ending it all…

Goodbye, cruel world

Goodbye, cruel world

 

 

 

 

15 thoughts on “Philosophy, Photographs and Puffins

  1. Clare Pooley

    Nicely done, Simon! I have never taken a selfie and probably never will. Any photographs of me usually end up with me looking very odd indeed. I have a beauty where I look like Bluto from Popeye.

    Reply
    1. quercuscommunity

      It’s better than looking like Fungus the Bogeyman! I’m becoming something of an expert on selfies – I love clicking on avatars and examining the direction of the stare. 🙂

      Reply
    2. jodierichelle

      Ugh – photos. My kids and all their friends know just the right way to tilt their perfect little heads. Me – I am a monster – I have never figured it out. That’s why my online photo is the same for so many years.

      Reply
    1. quercuscommunity

      It was a fortunate accident, as I was actually concentrating on panning the camera for the Panorama. Now that you’ve said this I will have to repeat it next month. 🙂

      Reply

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