Photographers

The Weather Disconnect

The Weather Disconnect

The Art of Adventure - Bruce Percy

I’m half-way through a workshop on the Isle of Eigg. The group and I found the first week held the most atmospheric conditions. Very poor visibility (great!), very low light (even better!), and quite difficult to shoot in rain and wind (not so great, but part of the deal if you want to capture atmospheric light).

I think there is a disconnect between ‘how one feels’ while experiencing bad weather and how the images look. As a beginner I put the camera away during ‘bad weather’ and only took it out to shoot in ‘good’ weather. These days, I embrace all kinds of weather (there is no such thing as bad weather - just bad light).

Good light for me is soft, low contrast light. Bad light for me is hard, high contrast light. Weather is something I just have to push through in order to find soft light, which may happen on any kind of day, any kind of season.

As a photographer, ‘bad weather days’ are just another dimension to our palette. If we shoot in different weather conditions, then we open ourselves up to coming home with a variety of images.

If we only shoot when it is dry, then our palette becomes rather limited, one dimensional even.

There are a few thing that stops us from widening our palette. First is perhaps our own comfort level when we are out shooting in ‘bad’ weather. The second one is our perception of bad weather. We tend to find low light levels, dark days and reduced colour affect our mood. It can be very difficult to motivate oneself to go outside if we are feeling low due to the weather.

One of my participants told me this week that he often feels quite miserable in bad weather. This is of course very common to find that the weather can affect how we feel when we are out shooting. I have often thought that there is a massive disconnect between what we perceive whilst on location and how we feel about the images we make. Rarely does one look at a scene of mist, atmospheric, frosty and think ‘I wouldn’t want to be out in that’. Instead we think ‘that looks really ethereal’. We think only of the aesthetic whilst reviewing images. But the ‘going out there to do it’ is an entirely different experience.

This is the hurdle we must get over.

In a way, it is another level of abstraction we must work on: being able to visualise the potential of an image irrespective of how the weather is affecting our mood.

The first day I took the group out in this bad weather, I could almost sense the feeling that everyone was just wondering if it would be worth it, and as it turned out, it was.

These days I now find myself feeling quite inspired when I am in difficult weather situations. I often find myself thinking ‘I wonder what kind of images this will produce?’. The key is to dress appropriately for the weather. If you are warm enough and dry enough, then it’s much easier to focus on the job at hand.

We are there to capture different moods and textures with our camera. We need to avoid having our mood hijacked by the weather conditions.

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