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gcquinn's photostream
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More than FOUR Years on Flickr! I still live near San Francisco and work in the city and I still drive across the Golden Gate Bridge every day. (If you want to know more about me, try looking at my gallery of photographs that have inspired me.) I joined Flickr in December, 2006 and it is still very humbling to look at the excellent work on Flickr and it is still an honor to learn from such fine photographers. The experience of these months has been like learning how to write, except in photographs. Here's a list that I've put down here mainly so I won't forget these hard-won lessons!
A few lessons learned the hard (and slow) way on Flickr:
(I started writing these down as I learned them from the first week on Flickr. Its just like me to have a lot of rules(!) so forgive me if I sound didactic. Some of this is good stuff, especially if you are starting out like I was. In the end I have learned that a good photograph touches on something that matters to people -- maybe a myth, maybe an oil spill -- and there's something free and unbounded about it, conditions that often come upon you in a moment and then are gone. Enjoy!)
Focusing the camera helps
Get rid of distracting stuff.
Get a subject
light matters
Background matters
Light is the subject (whether you like it or not)
The eye goes to the light
Subjects like to be the brightest thing
Or, even better, like the brightness thing to be behind them
(two points up there with "focus your camera")
Seek islands of lightness in the background
Crops Matter
Calibrate your monitor
Shoot as low an ISO as possible
Use a Tripod
Relax, its just a photograph
Compose to tell a story
don't crop out the context
A blown out spot has no data
Get a variable density filter
After thousands of JPEGs it is better to ... Shoot in RAW
Shoot low (Annie Leibovitz shooting Arnold Schwarzenegger at Sun Valley, Idaho -- www.iphotocentral.com/andrewsmith/search/detail.php/256/A...
Keep your filter clean
I used to think that the foreground was unimportant - (its important)
Color matters
Figure out the usual way -- then do it differently.
Checking those settings before shooting helps (letsee, its noon and the ASA is 2400...and auto date stamp is "on").
I once loved a narrow depth of field: I'm older and wiser now.
Stop down the lens
Reset the iso back to 200 after you're done
Composition matters.
If you have two subjects -- maybe you have two photographs
There's something about silhouettes
And reflections
The eye loves patches of intricate detail
I like the line where light meets dark.
The eye needs a place to go
(Someone pointed that out too).
If someone tells you they know all about composition, they don't.
They say the following:
It is VERY helpful to know about the rule of thirds
Interesting to know about the Golden Ratio
And occasionally good to know about Rabatment of the Rectangle.
Here's a link: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rule_of_thirds
They say you need to avoid putting important things at dead center.
The eyes are the most important things.
And then there's spirals, radials, diagonals, squiggles and that layering thing Escher did.
Perspective is important
Sometimes a photograph is just right and breaks all the rules.
Every Flickr photograph was posted for a good reason, even if I don't think so.
I have learned a lot by learning to like an "ugly" photograph.
Learning about color theory is a good idea.
Forget about Explore -- it will ruin you!,,,
...But get a good thumbnail if you still want it..
Shooting for the thumbnail will ruin you!
I used to believe in a "natural" self-taught understanding of composition...
-- but it helps to know the rules.
I have become comfortable with Photoshop layers.
I nearly fainted when I found Photoshop "noise reduction" (that was on June 26, 2008 -- note the difference).
Photoshop is great, but good light and composition trumps it.
And using a tripod, And selecting a low ISO And stopping down the lens.
I obsess about Light like Aubrey did wind.
Some people just know things.
Some things can't be planned.
Portraits are hard to do.
Know where the sun is
Take two people -- don't let them look at the camera -- photograph them and magic can happen.
And tell them not to smile
You can't force a photograph to have something it doesn't
Relationships matter more than beauty
Counterpoint is good
Sometimes the slightest crop makes all the difference
A critical comment is right on if you start arguing with it.
A critical comment is far, far more important than a laudatory one (the ego will survive).
The art of black and white is picking out the right colors
Ansel Adams did that by picking out a filter
Ansel Adams knew which filter to pick.
So did Paul Strand
Theme matters
Boldness is good
A "style" develops despite yourself: One day its there.
Some Photographs Touch us with their humanity
Which is the goal.
I never had time to think about any of this for my best shots.
Portraits are still my goal... I find them intimidating and I have much to learn, but my favorite, so far are of Freda Koblick:
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(I am sorry to say that my dear friends Freda and David passed away this summer (2011). Here's a nice tribute you can download from Austria's Menza: www.mensa.at/index.php?menuid=30 )
People seem to like my action shots. This is my favorite:
I went a little crazy with the Golden Gate Bridge -- finally I made a calendar of my shots (You can click on it)
Ansel Adams has inspired me from boyhood -- I appreciate him more as the years go by: that sense that we humans are small and delicate and tolerated by an awsome huge universe: That little town in the high country with its crosses set out in the graveyard; oblivious to the massive mountains and the moon and that huge black sky looking down on it and letting it be.
Here's my favorite Pelican (note his jaunty leg tag)
The series --

Here's a panorama of My Half Dome shots:

More photos of mine: flickr.com/photos/gcquinn/sets/72157602513573303/
Favorite Shots From my Contacts
Here's one of THE BEST portraits I've ever seen -- Lusitano69 published it on his photostream to honor the unknown photographer form the 1960s in Portugal:
www.flickr.com/photos/23690324@N02/2436926130/?addedcomme...
Here's a favorite shot (this one's from ehpien)
www.flickr.com/photos/91499534@N00/2365294918/
Here's another one (its beautiful and because I spent some childhood time at a lighthouse like this one):
www.flickr.com/photos/bradleya/744500560/#comment72157602...
And here's another one (also a great shot and because my infant son and I found this train by accident in Houston):
www.flickr.com/photos/wizards_stone/1280619677/#comment72...
Some thoughts on Neutral, Variable Density filters They solve the eternal problem of the sky being too light and the subject too dark: These magical devices come as either round filters, or (BETTER) a rectangle that you either hold by hand or place in the manufacturer's filter holder, the idea being that exposure of the sky will be brought down to the f stop of the subject. The results have been extraordinary for me.
There are several manufacturers, I'm using HiTech
Make sure it says neutral density (otherwise things might turn a little pinkish)
They have ranges of exposure differential from one to four F stops:
one F stop is listed as 0.3 (as in "ND Grad 0.3")
Two F stops, 0.6
Three, 0.9
Four 1.2
They come as "Hard," which is a quick transition, and "Soft," a slow transition, and "reverse," Which starts dark and becomes light for low horizon sunset shots. (as in "ND Grad Soft 1.2).

Photos of gcquinn (3)
gcquinn's favorite photos from other Flickr members (16,486)
Contacts (1,870)
Groups (50)
- Art-profiles.com International Photography 1,407 photos, 527 members
- *In the Garden* (ideas) 86 photos, 96 members
- Black and White of the best 72 photos, 50 members
- I Love B&W 35,974 photos, 1,979 members
- AIDAREH GROUP - ¡¡¡ Bienvenidos!!! Welcome!!!! -( P1-C3) 34,913 photos, 2,657 members
- Fish And Other Aquatic Animals 2,749 photos, 73 members
- Animals and Critters of the World 9,794 photos, 133 members
- *ESSENCE OF NATURE* [ Pos 1 / Awards 3 / No People ] 31,048 photos, 2,710 members
- Only in California 1,383 photos, 260 members
- Smithsonian Magazine 5th Annual Photo Contest 216 photos, 36 members
- Classic Sky Scenes 2,826 photos, 199 members
- Occupy Together movement 2,934 photos, 407 members
- Occupy Wall Street Photo Project 5,213 photos, 466 members
- Getty Images Call for Artists 472,718 photos, 81,844 members
- Fine Gold 204,578 photos, 13,317 members
- Picture at an Exhibition - Quadri di un esposizione 69,786 photos, 2,953 members
- Respect and Appreciation for Photography (Post 1 = Award 3) 2,537 photos, 1,536 members
- jesuscm's favorites Gallery (Admin invite only) P1►A/C3 1,974 photos, 331 members
- ✢~ Legacy Gallery ~✢ by ADMIN Invite Only, cmt 1 16,921 photos, 2,550 members
- Only Invite / Only on Explore 21,329 photos, 789 members
- Seen by my eyes ( P1-C1 ) 74,930 photos, 3,314 members
- "The Splendor of Autumn" 1,936 photos, 266 members
- Charles Darwin 4,997 photos, 500 members
- San Francisco - a sense of time, a sense of place 687 photos, 187 members
- Evil Conspiring Pelicans 937 photos, 122 members
- AYR Photos - Welcome level - ( post 1 = 3 com) 4,536 photos, 587 members
- Amazing Image: Road 10 photos, 5 members
- DOZE mag. Issue*7 HYPERBOLSK [CLOSED] 305 photos, 609 members
- NATURE !!! (Post 1 / Comment 3) Icon Contest : Grasshopper 17,923 photos, 1,266 members
- Weather Wonders of ☼Mother Nature☂(Sunsets, Storms, Clouds 3,852 photos, 357 members
- "FLOWERS WHISPER BEAUTY" 15,923 photos, 1,060 members
- ☆ LET FREEDOM RING ☆ LETS ROLL... 2,045 photos, 217 members
- Search The Best (Post INVITED photos Only) New Group 847 photos, 507 members
- Fan photo 1,326 photos, 11 members
- Classic Motor Yachts 410 photos, 84 members
- Eastern Sierra In Monochrome 51 photos, 25 members
- HYDE PARK PHOTOGRAPHY -Opening new site and first official issue 6,910 photos, 649 members
- Blink Again Level 1 P1/A3 no children and busy sweeping 131,655 photos, 11,009 members
- HIPSTER 804 photos, 366 members
- INTERESTING SHOT ✿B&W✿ 5,247 photos, 862 members
- Clyde's friends - only for dogs ! NO HUMAN! 1,566 photos, 283 members
- Fictitious Reality 45TH Exhibition-Jack.ed 22 photos, 251 members
- Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy 1,455 photos, 407 members
- Urban Design Office (Admin Invite- P1/C2 Pls) Winners announced 7,404 photos, 760 members
- Emotioned - The Competition is on! 140 photos, 118 members
- Frame from Life 8,490 photos, 422 members
- PASSION FOR FLOWERS - Post 1 Coment 4 9,615 photos, 1,409 members
- V for Visuality 944 photos, 358 members
- *~ Rock .. Paper - No Scissors ~* by Admin/Mod Invite 2,038 photos, 789 members
- "Favorite" Landscapes, Scenery, Ocean Views 10,154 photos, 793 members
Galleries (4)
- More Photographs that have Inspired Me 2 photos
- Vatican Spiral -- My Favorite Stairway 18 photos
- Emeville 18 photos
- Photographs That Have Inspired Me 18 photos
Testimonials (6)
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zhangwanlin says:
"Read your thinking on photography, from which pode experience. Like your work, learning ceaselessly."
24th January, 2011
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˙·٠•◠Peter Nguyen says:
"your profile has taught me more than i've read from many thick books. A truly photographer (not by equipments, not by technique). Thanks u so must!"
19th September, 2009
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choirbell says:
"I just wanted to let you know that I love your photos and I am continually impressed by the richness and depth of them. You're an awesome photographer and when I grow up I want to be just like you!!!
Keep up the beautiful work!"28th July, 2009
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jlcrucif says:
"Geoff was the first friend I met on Flickr. I had published just a few pictures on the site when I received a comment on one of my photos. I was astonished by the sensibility and deepness of this small text and wondered which class of pictures could do such a good WRITER. Well, great pictures also, made with the same sensibility and deepness.
First I considered Geoff as a great marine photographer, as he lives in a spectacular marine environment and enjoys wandering around the San Francisco beaches. But later I discovered his portraits, then his great mountain shots (some inspired by Ansel Adams), then his inspired nature pictures, then his ethical social images... Geoff is a great and complete photographer. He likes to tell: "The more I take pictures, the less I know about photography". I agree definetely with him!"17th November, 2007
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Jukkie says:
"Geoff has an eye for composition, color and drama, he continues to post superb pictures that are full of life and tell great stories.
A versatile photographer with a portfolio ranging from seascapes to portraits, from macro's to cityshots.
Read his list of lessons learned on flickr. These are well worth taking note of!
And Geoff not just wrote them down but shows he can use them very, very well.
But enough talk, stop reading this and go check out his photos!"14th September, 2007
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Frizztext says:
"More than three thousand people already have viewed Geoff's photo of the Queen Mary 2, passing the Golden Gate Bridge -- and I am sure, this pic would fit well on many walls of some San Francisco Bay living rooms. But not only spectacular seascapes are created by Geoff, I'm impressed by his portraits too, done with humanity; I think it is a great honor, to be portrayed by such a sensible artist, surely a congenial mind compared with Freda Koblick, a sculptor and painter, one of his adorable contacts and portrait-topics (living in a converted synagogue). The friendship with her brought him to notice instantly the famous photographers Cunningham or Ansel Adams. A photographer has to be open minded. We feel this, when we discover his series taken on the Mount Saint Helens, but even more, when he WRITES comments to pics. My heart was touched when I read his pelican-statement for "Lost Patrol in for the night": "I happen to adore Pelicans. I think it comes from growing up in La Jolla, California, where every kid surfed, or body surfed or in some way hung out in the water long enough to see these guys gliding in formation along the waves, catching the updraft along the wave face, wingtips just kissing the rising water. And just before calamity, before the wave would break, they would pop up and dip down to the next line of rising swell, dignity intact. They are fluid until they spot a fish and then all elegance is lost as they flip over and hit the water in what can only be called an ungainly and crash. They come up with a fish every time though and dignity is preserved." -- My last comment: Geoff seems to catch photos alike the pelicans a fish: with dignity: I hope (because I am only a second languager from Germany): soon we can read some more testimonials with the topic: Geoff Quinn..."
2nd August, 2007
- Name:
- Geoff Quinn
- Joined:
- January 2007
- Hometown:
- Hanover, New Hampshire
- Currently:
- San Rafael, California, USA
- I am:
- Male and Taken


















