Searching for inspiration

So I just spent all afternoon on 500px, uploading a few of my own images and browsing others in search of inspiration.

I love looking through 500px because the overall quality of the photographs is much higher than other sites and I don’t need to filter through so much rubbish.  Plus, if I find an image that really speaks to me and others have commented, I can hover over their user icons and see 3 examples of their work, which helps me to quickly find other photographers who’s work I can follow.

I’m a little overwhelmed!  Some of the work I’ve seen today was so beautiful it made me gasp.

I looked through a lot of portfolios with work similar to the kind I want to do, so in that way it was a very inspiring experience.  But that is a double edged sword.  Almost all of the images I loved and identified with were made using equipment I don’t have (like 50mm and 100mm prime lenses, and dedicated macro lenses–all costing more moolah than I have at the moment).  So, on the one hand, I have been inspired to create beautiful images.  But on the other hand, I don’t have everything I need to make those images look the way I want them to.

Sigh.

But I want to make images like those with that equipment!

This is a trap that’s easy to fall into (and one I, personally am very familiar with).  I don’t have what I need so that I can do what I want, so I’ll just wait until I can get it and then I’ll be happy.

Don’t fall for it!  It’s a cop-out and it will do nothing but stymie your creativity and stagnate you.  

I have learned over the years that, to remain happy, it is much better for me to focus on the things that I have than the things that I don’t.  I have a perfectly functional DSLR camera–a Nikon D5100–with a perfectly functional kit lens.  So what if don’t have the fancy-schmancy equipment I want to make that specific kind of image?  My camera works fine and has allowed me to take beautiful pictures.  I may not be able to make all the pictures I want to (yet!), but that doesn’t mean that I can’t figure out how do something else amazing with what I already have. 

But I won’t ever know that if I just stop everything and wait until I get what I want.  I need to use what I have.  In fact, I had originally asked for my current camera and it was given to me, so I did get what I wanted.  It is my duty to put it to learn to use it to the best of my ability.

Anyway, who’s to say that if I got my fancy lens right now that I will even be capable of utilizing it the way I want to?  If I don’t have the XP that comes from creatively using what I have now I’m not going to magically become a better photographer just because I have better gear.

Taken with Nikon D5100, Nikkor 18-55mm kit lens     Taken with Nikon D5100, Nikkor 18-55mm kit lens

From this morning: little mushrooms in the yard and pretty weeds in the blue wheelbarrow after a rainy night.

If you haven’t already gotten there in your own head, this can be applied to many aspects of life.  I used to use the excuse of not having what I needed to wait and not do anything.  Then when (and if) I finally did get what I thought I needed, I still didn’t do anything with it because I didn’t know how to because I hadn’t worked up to it.

I’ve (mostly) learned that lesson and now I endeavor to always keep moving forward.  I use what I have available to me and let that drive my creativity to do things I hadn’t previously thought of.

Besides, sometimes simply taking action toward our goals opens up opportunities for us to get what we need/want.  

Learn to use what you have available to you; that’s creativity.  And appreciate what you have; that’s happiness.

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