There, I said it. I am totally a lazy photographer.

Photographing on auto — Is that lazy?

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Dried leaf and hydrangea lzay

dried dead leaf with frost lazy

Yeah, I do this more often than people might think. I told you, I’m lazy. I just wandered out in my backyard for about 5-10 minutes this morning because there was a bit of frost around. Also, because I keep staring wistfully out my patio door windows at the hydrangea in all their fall brownness and texture, it was time to go out and take a few photos of them.

I mostly photographed in auto mode. Why? Because I just couldn’t be bothered to figure out what I wanted to do. Because I just wanted some quick shots of the little flowers that make up the hydrangea and the frost. It was really an excuse to go out and get some fresh, cool air.

Until auto didn’t work for what I wanted

.mgl-tiles { display: none; } #mgl-gallery-63739a3aa95fe { margin: -5px; width: calc(100% + 10px); } #mgl-gallery-63739a3aa95fe .mgl-box { padding: 5px; } @media screen and (max-width: 768px) { #mgl-gallery-63739a3aa95fe { margin: -5px; width: calc(100% + 10px); } #mgl-gallery-63739a3aa95fe .mgl-box { padding: 5px; } } @media screen and (max-width: 460px) { #mgl-gallery-63739a3aa95fe { margin: -5px; width: calc(100% + 10px); } #mgl-gallery-63739a3aa95fe .mgl-box { padding: 5px; } }

web with water drops lazy

drop on leaf lazy

Then it happened, I couldn’t get what I wanted so I switched to Aperture Priority (something else I don’t really do much of). Being lazy though, I didn’t change anything else so when I uploaded my 51 images, the ones that I shot on AV, well they were blurry.

Why? Because I didn’t change anything but the aperture. My shutter speed was too slow for the light with the f/10 I was shooting. I know better. Oh well.

Why am I telling you this?

I’m pretty sure I’m not the only lazy one out there. I actually do this quite a bit. I go out in my yard, take a bunch of shots and then come in, upload and delete almost all of them. It’s just a testament to the fact that it’s not always about the end results.

Sometimes it’s just about doing. Clicking the shutter. Looking through the viewfinder. Getting outside. Practice seeing.

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