Hellooo, I hope you enjoyed this episode - I'm really happy with the final result of this video. After shooting with Flo I wasn't yet sure how to bring it all together, but I think it turned out pretty cool. Thank you to Flo ( @analoguevibez ) for showing me the gorgeous forest and adding his perspective to the video!
I think, your style videos for someone getting into photography is beyond just beginner. It's the feeling of someone wanting to improve, it's profound enough to let a viewer think on their own while you gently nudge them to a similar appeal that you would have.
I think having to carry the camera and take the time to snap photos are not the only friction points when you want to make photography a habit. You also then need to spend time and effort developing, organizing or editing them, which can be even more challenging. Another thing is finding the motivation to take and edit photos when you've got no audience that would appreciate them, whether it be your friends or strangers on the internet.
I completely understand that the editing can take a toll on this process. There are ways though to stream line the process or even cameras that can help such as the Fuji cameras that include film simulations. The audience however should not be of your concern. Photography should stem from the intrinsic motivation to document or capture, not to present or seek validation. Even with the amount of photographs I share here and on Instagram, there are so many photos that I love and haven't published anywhere and probably never will - they are just for me. This can have various reasons, such as privacy (intimate photos of family) or simply the subject matter only being something you relate to :)
@@teocrawford Sure, you're right, and the art of noticing and the habit of carrying the camera on you definitely help! I just wanted to add to the points you made that the process does need to start with that intrinsic motivation, which can often dip and shouldn't be taken for granted, and that it doesn't end with pressing the shutter either. (I'm actually quite happy with the standard color profile of my camera and I rarely edit or share any photos, so that's a big 'time saver', let's say... But in the last two years, I didn't have the capacity to even organize my everyday photos, which left me with a messy folder of over 20 000 shots. Knowing that any new photos would just end up on top of that pile didn't exactly help motivate me to take more. Now I'm slowly working through that backlog and I've adopted a better 'system' to keep them tidy without too much effort and overthinking. Also trying not to 'spray and pray' so much...)
@@dominik.zemanek.97 Yeah absolutely, thank you for sharing!🫶🏼 Ohh actually… in case this comforts you in any way, my backlog is exactly the same, just a huuuge pile of shots haha. But somehow I don’t really care, I don’t mind that - I‘ve just always accepted that to be part of the process😅🤷🏻♂️
I shoot with a Fuji recipe in jpeg… I upload straight to my photography page on Facebook with 0 followers and set to private. I love my photos. They’re art to me and make me feel a beautiful nostalgic feeling of seeing the world the way I wish to.
I absolutely love your videos. The aesthetics, the music, the photos, everything is just perfect. Your videos have helped me a great deal in becoming more confident in my photography. Which in turn made me able to dedicate my final examination project to photography and nature which really makes me happy. Your videos have also helped and still help me get through a tough time. My mother-in-law got sick about 6 months ago and sadly passed away way too young a couple of weeks ago. Those last moment really taught me to appreciate the simple and mundane things around us and these videos somehow really help me to get my mind in order. I really hope you keep on making great videos and keep having fun.
This entire year I've been bringing my A9 with me every time I leave the house in my car, and just randomly stopping at places on my way to and from destinations, taking pictures of things that I find interesting. Sometimes while driving... LOL.
Every time I watch your videos i get a lot of inspiration. I photographed 365 days from October 2022 to October 2023 and looking at your 30 days, I want to continue this challenge again. I realized that I didn’t treat the marathon as I should have. Very inspired by the level of your photos! It’s very beautiful and looking at the photos i feel calm. Are they... kind? Thank you for your art!
Thank you for your kind words! Congratulations on pulling off the 365 day streak, that's amazing! Shouldn't be too hard to keep going now - you've already been on it for a year at this point! :D I'm so happy you can some way connect with the photography, thank you!
This could not ring more true, the fun got sucked out of photography for me so I sold commercial gear & stopped looking for any clients. Just focused on my career, bought a pocket camera with fixed 28mm. It’s been 2 years since then and I’ve since found the love I’ve lost. In that time of having a camera on me daily for two years, I took my best shots I’ve ever taken. I just wrapped up a succesful self printed, binded & published photobook using only those images.
tbh i couldnt skip a single frame in this video, every second in this video is an truly experiment of Mr Crawford and few whispers of an honest deep inside him, the scenaries are extravagant and breathtaking at all. At the end, he gave us a brief sight ab photography, color, styles etc Love it!! hope u have more motives and capable to produce more piece of art. Appreciate
Out of that initial general list, I gotta say that I can't understate that good sleep does help (as it does with everything). I've suffered through a lot of insomnia on a semi-regular basis and I can see in the frames when my brain is suffering from lack of sleep. You sometimes don't even feel too different, but it's evident when you're looking back!
As both a photographer and professional musician, I can second this. Sometimes only 30 minutes of difference can make or break a day too. Getting enough sleep takes the foot off of the break for creativity.
Great video! When I first started photography four years ago during the pandemic, I decided I would take a camera with me everyday. It started off we me walking my dog every morning and no matter where we went, I took my camera. I keep a canon gx15 in my car so that I will always have a camera in my care just in case. Am I great? No, but the journey has been fun and I still do it to this day (I am about to go on a walk now). Don't no if I will ever have a paying gig through photography, but, that is not my goal. My goal is capture moments that make me feel good and learning all I can with equipment I have. It can be frustrating at times and some days, I just don't want to take a camera with me. Even If I don't, I still find some time during the day to take at least one photo. It's such a good habit and I'm to the point where I feel guilty if I don't take at least one photo a day. Even if it's just around the house, I will take at least one photo (lol). It is good habit and you will see improvement and start to develop your own style and trying different things you never thought you would be capable of doing, especially if you are self taught. Kudos to you and Flo and keep up the great content.
I was rewatching your video as RU-vid out of a sudden suggested it to me again in the feed (good job algorithm 😂) and can´t thank you enough Teo for creating such a magical piece of work. I´m always speechless how you´ve aligned all moments of that day in such a incredible, captivating way. Can´t wait to repeat that with a visit in Austria ♥
Your videos have a sense of calmness to it and I also want to say maybe nostalgic? It evokes a sense of familiarity and peacefulness. Hope to do it myself one day but thanks for posting teo
I would love to see you make a video of a night/fog self portrait like you used to do but with the new story telling and editing you have developed since ä. Great videos also!
Aww would be fun again some time! Sadly Innsbruck is reaaally not foggy and my interests and style in photography have changed and shifted, hence I haven't been doing those too much recently. But speaking of it doooees give me the itch to go for another one of those sessions :D
Another excellent, slow paced and thoughtful video: thanks !! I use peak design clips on my backpacks with arca swiss type plates mounted under the camera. That way the camera is always there on the backpack strap and there is no friction to immediately shoot with my Panasonic Lumix G80 or G9.
Amazing video Teo! I’ve always had a passion for photography. For me, It’s a beautiful hobby that makes you appreciated life as it is and capture those moments. This video has inspired me to keep practicing my photography skills and maybe, who knows, sale my photographs to make a living.
Really enjoyed this video. Those views through the Alps are amazing. Visited Fussen a few years ago and its like something out of a dream even when the light isn't perfect.
I love this view of photography! I'm like you and I often schedule a time to take photo, but I try ro have my camera with me most of the time now. I kind of like even more doing photo with this new mindset !😊
I absolutely love that film like aesthetic in your videos, those warm tones, grainy shots and the composition of your scenes are just inspiring. You definitely inspire me to take more picture and become a better photographer. Keep up your great work Too!
Hey Teo, greetings from Oberbayern! Nice video, I'll have to check out the rest of your stuff... Flo talks about 'being lucky'. I always tell people that good photographers aren't 'lucky' - they make their own luck by being in the right place at the right time...
Hey guys it’s a long shot that you’ll see this comment but I started shooting about 2 years ago or so after my first trip to Italy since then I’ve been to Iceland and our most recent EU trip Germany more specific south of Munich in a city called Zorneding, we would drive through the forest almost every afternoon to eat in Aying and it was beautiful. I’m so jealous of your homeland. Quite the astonishing place to live. I’ve found it’s quite hard to find that excitement in places you live day to say so I thought hearing it from someone like me would be a good message for all.
So thankful to Thomas Heaton for introducing me to you and to you for introducing me to Flo. Love film photography. Anyone knows which camera Flo was using?
What a lovely video. I couldn't agree more! When we're traveling in our van, I always have my camera in hand - taking video out the window and photographing and filming our adventures in nature. But when we're home, walking our dog daily in the forest, I rarely take my camera unless there's fresh snow or special conditions. Now, thanks to you, I'm going to start taking it with me every day. (I've missed some awesome shots by not having it with me.) As a newly inspired photographer, I notice that even if I don't have my camera I still am looking at the world through a photographer's eye, - that is a wonderful way to look at the world. It has strengthened my sense of being present in my environment. I have a couple of tips for carrying a camera. My favorite setup is my Canon R6 with a 24-70 f2.8 lens. This is pretty heavy. I have a camera strap I sling over my shoulder and my camera clips on and off very easily with an arca-swiss attachment. I have a similar setup on my backpack strap, so I don't have to take off my backpack if we're hiking. Swish and click... and I can take a video or a photo. Thanks again. I found you from Thomas Heaton's link to your video. I've subscribed and I look forward to more of your videos. ~ Kristina @ClarityOffGrid
How you can not make photography a habit when you live in the Alps is a little startling, to say the least. You have no end of stunning things to point a camera at and take a decent image. Live in a non descript place then try making photography a habit! Anyway, the variety of shots was intetesting to see.
I`ve been shooting film for over thirty years, a Leica M3 that I no longer own and a Nikon F2 that I use today, Film has gotten very expensive for me. I use Blue Moon Camera for optical prints and premium scans with flash drives. Cost of film and shipping, together with the optical prints, run over $100! So I decided to purchase a Leica MD 262 digital camera the one that shoots like film with no LCD screen. The images from the Leica are too perfect! My Nikon (film) camera produces a more relaxed, organic natural rendering. I like both formats but film is a winner for me except for the costs. I do use the Leica much more but just can`t stop shooting film...!
Best video yet Teo! Absolutely love your videos since I got into analog photography a couple months ago. I know 35mm photography is your thing, but would you ever do a video trying out medium format cameras?
Hey Teo, love your videos ! It really reminded me of the movie Perfect Days, seeing beauty in everyday life and capturing it sometimes. I think you should see it !
Oh hey! Did I spot that you drove through Weißenhorn at 4:29. My home town for 2 years now. The area has become a little uninspiring, but Flo's photo's look great and inspiring. Good video, and I agree with your point.
After watching the previous episode, I also started a 30-day challenge, only I don't take a photo, but a video. and only vertical at 35mm. Just to make it difficult. Not simple. Mainly because you have to get close to everyone, which is more than unusual. My thinking and attitude have not changed. I'm already thinking about the next location, I'll let you know as soon as possible. But it won't work that way. But there is still a long way to go. This can change. Thank you
Hey there! 🌟 I'm currently navigating the 'broke but hopeful' phase of my life, where even dreams of owning a camera seem like luxury! 😅 Any tips on starting creative projects on a shoestring budget? Keep inspiring! ✨"
As a fellow broke person I’d say go to thrift stores and go often. Eventually you’ll find a decent film camera, digital point and shoot, or an old DSLR… Either that or buy them used! Hope this helps.
I like that you go through the problem with your camera being in your backpack. I carry mine in a side-bag, but all I have to do is unzip one part and pull the camera out. I don't have to take my bag off or unclip my camera after that or anything. I also never use a lens cap because that's an extra step that gets in the way. I also leave my camera switched on 100% of the time. It hibernates after 30 seconds, it doesn't use batteries when hibernating, and the time it takes to wake up and set an exposure is less than the time it takes me to feel the push of my finger on the shutter button, so it might as well have been on the whole time. The most impressive part about you and your friend is that you're shooting film! Being limited to 24 pictures at a time was such an obstacle for me before digital SLRs. I could never take enough pictures to get good, or have enough left to be prepared for another picture, because I would always run out of film first.
Thanks for a great video! This technique does, however, become a challenge in a place where it’s not safe to have your camera hanging around your neck the whole time 😂 You’ll very quickly not have a camera anymore.
While I agree heavily with this, the only qualm I've had with it is you need to focus on consistency not perfection with this practice b/c sometimes this lends itself into removing yourself from the present and experience to take pictures. The mindset shift I found that's helped me build this habit and stay present is to limit the amount I take of a moment. I'd rather snap only a few photos of a special moment that end up badly, but preserve the emotions and presence of that image than focus on taking so many pictures that it takes me out of the moment. Love this
Wow, Europe (ok, at least the places you traversed through your video) are beautiful. I wish American towns looked like European ones. Also, the countryside is beautiful. Here in America, I live in the Midwest, near the Great Lakes, and I have easy access to the countryside, but I am surrounded by corn. There is other beauty in my area, other than the countryside, such as the local city park, or on some occasions, there is some really beautiful hill country south of me about a half hour away.
Hey, how do you make your shot balanced and colorful? I use my old Sony and I don't know how to control the settings (iso and stuff) and the shot is always bad, either so dark or bright. Is there any video where I can learn those things? (I'm a beginner and also don't know how lighting and angles work.) Do you have any suggestions? T-T
Florida resident here. Lately its been consistently in the 106 degrees here which doesnt help because I work 9 hour days outside. By the time im done the last thing on my mind is going out again. But ive been dedicating my time to learning thr darkroom. Im still involved with my photos but I dont have to go out in the extreme heat after being in the extreme heat all day 🤣
I disagree a little bit about the “keep your camera around your neck” thing. Personally I use a messenger bag with velcro. It’s super quick to open and take out the camera. I rarely skip potential photos. That said, I also spend a lot of time with my camera I hand (I use wrist straps) even when I’m on a bike. That is more for speed than for reducing friction in the “should I bother?” thought process.
I loved this videoo :) 💕 It reminded me of the feeling I get every time I take a photo of the sky! I don’t go out much and the sky… although it’s always the sky, it’s also always a different sky (I don’t know if it makes sense haha 😅), so I like when I notice it and take a picture! It’s always here, its easy to photograph and it makes me feel present :) Thanks for making this video! I think something clicked in my head! ✨
Thanks Teo for inspiring me to go out and shoot more! I am too base in Austria and it can get hard to shoot amidst the everyday chaos but I now take my camera with me everyday! 🙏🏻💪🏻
This is great! I love carrying cameras with me, recently I even give my pocket camera to my mom to see what she sees. It’s an amazing thing I’ve noticed… I can hear her stories, but it’s a whole different thing being able to see through her vision. Now the one thing I really struggle is not documenting, but having the habit to review my documentation and having a structure to store them in a hard drive or my computer… do you have a video about this?😅
Not only does that guy live near beautiful pine forests there is mist maybe pretty often? I could not be more envious! I always have a camera with me, but my photos don’t turn out that great. Still having fun with it though!