for scott space

Think Space

Image and Post by Rick Sammon – Follow Rick Sammon
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Mozart once said: I’m not so much concerned about the notes, but the space between the notes.

As a musician (I studied at Berklee College of Music in Boston), I can relate to that quote – because the space between the notes is just as important as the notes themselves. No space . . . and you have just noise.

In photography, space is important, too. If all the elements in a scene are jammed up, your picture will be a mess.

These two pictures “work” because there is space between the subjects in the scenes.

You can create space by orchestrating a scene. In the making of the top image, we asked the riders to space out the horses during this set up shot. The first shots was just a jumble of shapes.

In the making of the bottom image, I carefully chose a shooting angle that clearly showed the butterflies mating. (I used a right light, by the way, for that even lighting.)

Take a look at some of your images and look at space.

Your assignment: take a few pictures this week and focus on space.

P.S. Speaking of being at Berklee, world-famous Photoshop Expert Eddie Tapp and Canon’s Steve Inglima are both skilled musicians. So is artist John Paul Caponigro and the Mac Group’s Joe Brady. Tony Sweet is an accomplished jazz drummer. Scott Kelby? He plays keyboards, guitar and he sings. And… Ansel Adams played the piano! Guess photographers and musicians have something in common: we all think about space.

Editor’s NOTE: In college I minored in music (guitar performance) – hey if this photography thing doesn’t work out maybe Rick and I will form a band!

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