You will find many “best of 2013” posts and news articles this time of year. Today, I’m going the opposite direction and posting my worst of 2013. Actually, these aren’t truly the worst, just some bad images that didn’t get deleted immediately.
Every photographer posting on the internet is posting images they are proud of, and it is the same with me. I get a lot of comments on how great my images are, but that is only because I don’t show anyone the bad stuff (at least until now). Ask any professional photographer whose work you admire if they take any bad shots, and if they say “no”, they are lying to you.
However, taking bad shots is not, in fact, a bad thing to do. Taking a lot of shots, trying a lot of different compositions, and experimenting in different techniques is a good way to learn what works and what doesn’t work, even if many of your images do turn out bad. Take a lot of differing shots and you are bound to come up with at least a few good ones. Learn from you mistakes, and the percentage of good shots will grow. If you don’t have any bad ones, in my opinion, you are either totally stale or not shooting enough. There’s no reason with digital cameras not to go out on a limb and try something different. Be brave, experiment! Try different exposures, try moving the camera while shooting, try a different perspective. Just remember to try to learn from both what works and what doesn’t.
Here are some of my worst images of 2013, one for each month except for July. July is excluded not because I didn’t take any bad shots in July, but because I only used my camera at weddings in July and I’m not about to put any bad wedding shots out on the internet. For the other months, I’m showing a bad shot both straight out of the camera and after trying to improve it in Lightroom (this is only fair, since I shoot RAW and process all the shots shown on my blog), plus a few comments on what makes it bad and the lessons I’ve learned once again.
13 responses to “The Worst of 2013 and Lessons Learned”
hmunro
Thank you so much for having the courage to post your “worst photos of 2013.” Not only is it reassuring to see that even photographers I admire occasionally miss the boat (pardon the pun) — but your critique of each image is actually a superb photo lesson in its own right. Happy new year!
Thanks! I am hoping the that others can learn from my mistakes and miscues, just as I learn from them every time I mess up. Best to you in 2014, may it bring many great photo opportunities!
Thanks for the comment. I think, in my case, it is not so much courage as a desire to inspire other photographers. I have had students that are really down on their images; I have to remind them we all take shots that don’t work right and we can learn from that.
This is great! We shoot, we analyze and we shoot again. I love the learning process with photography and applying that in the field. I often shoot many “bad” images to experiment, then try for the image I want. You have some amazing reminders in these images and no doubt you have many great ones! Happy New Year!
Thanks Eric. I don’t know about “many” great ones, but I do have a few great ones and many mediocre ones. Having a willingness to experiment and not to be afraid of failure is what it is about. Otherwise, how can we learn and grow as photographers?
Thank you, interesting to read your lessons learned, I shoot a lot of photos and many, many are not good at all, for different reasons. Great to reflect on what makes them not good:-) Thank you!
Thanks for commenting. By looking at those reasons things don’t work the way we want, we can learn, particularly if there is some issue repeated again and again. Over the years, I’ve found I’ve had a problem with focus (and still do as demonstrated above). By analyzing my bad shots, I’ve done a much better job with it.
My eye may not be as fine-tuned as yours is (or maybe we just have different eyes for photography) but I thought some of those were pretty good, some before and some after. Maybe it was the subject matter, I don’t know. I liked the one with the field of tulips the best- what a pretty shot. I thought the darker image was really good but so was the lighter image. Yes, I know, you were unhappy with it but I liked it. I also liked the June and November shots as well. I guess it goes to show that some people’s “worst” work can always be appreciated by someone else as better than they perceive it. 🙂
Thanks for the comments Jake. Yes, some of it is in the eye of the beholder, and in my case, I am certainly comparing the shots to other shots I took at the same time.
If you saw the other shots of the field of tulips, for example, that I took at the same time, you would agree this was a bad shot. Even then, processing made it almost presentable; but due to the level of digital noise brought out by the underexposure, it would not work for any high-resolution purpose (most images on the internet are low resolution, which hides many flaws). The same is true of the November shot, it looks “okay” as a low resolution image (as in the post), but the whole images is horribly out of focus. The June shot is a bit more subjective, the slanting horizon was fixable to a certain extent, but my main issue with it was trying to do too much (in terms of dynamic range) with a single image. I wanted details in both the sky and the shadows, and from a single image, I was not able to achieve that. Once again, as a low-resolution image, it isn’t too bad, but at high resolution, there is a lot of noise in the dark portions. In hind sight, I should have taken a series of images and used HDR or manual blending in Photoshop to get what I wanted.
[…] writing this post, I suppose I am starting a tradition since I wrote a worst of 2013 post last year.This time of year, there are many “best of” lists, and as I’ve already […]
[…] in learning from one’s mistakes, though as you will see if you go back to the 2014 and 2013 posts, perhaps I need to keep re-learning some of the same issues over and over. So without further […]
Leave a Reply