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Friday Photo Inspiration. Simple Photography Tips “Christmas is for Slowing Down”
In some parts of the world, where it's warm and sunny - go and find a lizard and sit still, breathe slowly, and just watch it - two minutes, five minutes. Look at it, and notice things you'd never noticed before. Look around and notice.
If it's wet and miserable, go and watch a branch drip, notice the light shining through, move a little and watch it from a different angle.

Michael Blyth
1 min read


Friday Photo Inspiration: Périgord Black Truffle (Tuber melanosporum) – Simple Photography Tips & Creative Insights - Value emerges from darkness
Facts aside, to me they tell a story of things that have remained hidden as they grow, their value and importance increasing in those dark places. To be found only by those in the know, with the skill to uncover such things.
The similarity with human kind: where many folk feel in darkness, but it is this that produces strength of character. "Learn not to fear the dark places.
It’s often where the best things come from,
Like truffles under soil."

Michael Blyth
2 min read


Simple Photography Tips – Seeing Artistic Potential in Everyday Objects
There are so many items around like this, with each of them, if you look long enough, and change your angle of view to allow the light to play differently, you will see a multitude of inviting images, pictures that would look great as modern art on your wall.
Let's go through of the twenty or so that I took. Each image records something different, patterns of texture, contrasts of pattern, light playing on different surfaces in different ways.

Michael Blyth
4 min read


Friday photo inspiration. Simple Photography Tips - Finding Inspiration Through Photography and Words "Sunset Blessings".
We had arrived at Far del Cap Salines moments after the sun had set, thinking we'd missed the show, but then the sky caught fire - it got better than this, but my i-phone died through lack of battery. --aaaghh.

Michael Blyth
1 min read


If Your Photos Feel “Off”, This Is Probably Why - balance in photography - Simple Photography Tips
With the person in the water, the eye lands first on the area of the fishermans huts and the rib, then immediately responds to the contrast of the figure in the water - so it's a bit like a visual see-saw - with image four providing a double see-saw with one fulcrum being, like the other two, the mid-point between the fishing huts and the bather, There is another line sort of running vertically between the woman and the rib.

Michael Blyth
5 min read
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