Category: Books

At the Scene of the Story

Alice Degan is a friend of mine who also happens to be an author of urban fantasy fiction. What I like is that her fiction is set in Toronto’s Kensington Market (one of my favourite places to shoot) so when she needed some photographs it was the natural choice of locations. As we moved from spot to spot it was fascinating to hear  how they related to the stories. A fascinating shoot which gave me added insight into her great stories. Highly recommended!

Alice Degan

 

Nikon D7100, 18-200mm Nikkor lens
Post processing with Lightroom and Nik Color Efex 4

A Comment On Photography Books

No picture today, just a bit of a rant about the state of Photography books and bookstores.

I will be out of the country next week, and I wanted to take along some reading. Since I got a view camera recently I thought I would pick up The Negative by Ansel Adams. This book is a classic of the genre, and I thought it would really help me learn what I need to know in order to make better pictures. While I could have ordered the book online, it would not have arrived on time to take with me. It was not available as an ebook. Note to Kindle et al: I won’t really take the concept of eBooks seriously until you expand your catalogs! It’s not as if you need to rent more warehouse space.

The only option I had was to go to a physical bookstore, so I went to downtown Toronto to a couple of the larger bookstores in the city. In the first store, it seemed that every photography book had the word digital in it, regardless of how digital-specific the content was or was not: Digital Lighting, Composition for Digital Photography, Shooting the Digital Nude. (That last one was a puzzler; maybe a proctology fetish book?). The store did not have what I was looking for, so off to the second bookstore.

I saw more of the same at the second store, but luckily they did have one forlorn, semi-hidden copy of The Negative, so I went ahead and bought it.

Except for niche, specialized, high-end or used bookstores, maybe this is one more reason the death knell is sounding for the typical physical book store; if you can’t compete on price, selection or experience, what is left?