
πππ₯π₯πͺ
OLD BARNS β 026 & 027
The only way to have gotten a better shot (besides obtaining better equipment made for telephoto shots) would have been to ask permission of the land owners to traipse across their property to get closer to the barns.
I find that undesirable for several reasons. First, people in this area are conservative-minded folk, so they are mistrustful of strangers and dealing with such can be quite a challenge, especially for [what they consider] a lowly woman (a man would be taken more seriously). Second, I've had social anxiety since my husband passed, and dealing with people I don't know can be disturbing to me, even if they are pleasant. Third, trying to catch them home at a time when I am available could be troublesome. Most of my barn photos were shot during the years I was care-giving for my elderly parents, so there wasn't much flexible time for non-necessary things. Fourth, I have over 300 barns in my Old Barn Project now, and coordinating permission to photograph each one would be a terribly time-consuming task, so I think shooting-and-running is better. Fifth, there would be so many questions: βWhy do you want to photograph our barn? βWhat is so special about our barn? βWhat are you going to do with the photos? βWill they be online, in a book, or hung in a gallery? βWho will be seeing the photos? βWill you be making any money from this? βWill I get any money for this? etc.
I really like it much better when the barns are closer to the road. Old barns are iconic symbols of a "simple life," so it is fitting (in my mind) that my efforts to capture these beauties remain simple, too, even if they don't earn me a blue ribbon at a photography exhibition.
!steemitworldmap 34.618459 lat -82.693431 long Anderson County, SC D3SCR
https://steemitimages.com/0x0/https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmPM1JABtfbJDy4G5ZEGysVtoz9nNYGtJGPB6sGcHTVHtc/#thealliance%[email protected]
Return from OLD BARNS β 026 & 027 to πππ₯π₯πͺ's Web3 Blog