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You Should Be Taking More Smartphone Photos

Some academics argue that picture taking enhances rather than ruins moments. I couldn't agree more.

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A came out that said taking pictures, even in the age of social media, can enhance, rather than ruin, your experience of an event or place.聽

Well, duh!

Some people might call that crazy, claiming that being聽glued to our聽phones prevents us from聽paying attention to what鈥檚 around us.聽But聽as a professional photographer鈥擨 worked as a photojournalist before I became the online gear editor at 国产吃瓜黑料鈥擨 was taught to engage the world through my camera. I felt connected with people聽and places when I took photos.聽I had to pay closer attention and聽be an active participant.

The photo world has a name for this. It鈥檚 called 鈥渟eeing.鈥 Just like a reporter has to figure out how to tell a complete story with words, a photographer has to figure out how to tell a complete story with images. Who are the important characters? Where is the light? Where should I stand? When is the most important part of this event going to happen? When those all come together, you鈥檙e 鈥渟eeing鈥 instead of just observing. It鈥檚 a hard skill to learn, but once you do, it sticks with you. You start to see the world differently because you鈥檙e trained to record and engage with it.

I take fewer pictures now, and my photos aren鈥檛 being used in the news. But I still try to see. I point an iPhone at my friends on the skin track or instead of a DSLR at street protests, but that same engagement is still there. If I鈥檓 pressing the shutter button,聽it鈥檚 because I think what鈥檚 happening in front of me is important and visual and that I should pay close聽attention to it.

I acknowledge the other side. Photographers, even amateurs, are sometimes accused of using the camera as a barrier between themselves聽and what鈥檚 unfolding. We can pay more attention to our framing than reality. It happens, and, yes, the camera can be a distraction. But here鈥檚 the thing: We鈥檙e still there, still paying attention, and still trying to capture what鈥檚 important so others can see it.聽

And, yes, many of us than the actual photo or event. I鈥檓 guilty. I can鈥檛 help but take pictures that I think will . I often avoid harder but important moments (my kids crying, for example) because聽people will just scroll past them on聽their phones. But even so,聽when I look back through my Instagram feed, I鈥檓 always glad I was motivated to take pictures鈥攅ven if those pictures are edited.聽

I know our smartphone cameras come between us. If you鈥檙e suffering from because your social feeds are full of narcissistic face shots, you鈥檙e unnecessarily distracted. But I also love that we鈥檝e developed phones with cameras so good that they rival聽and sometimes beat聽regular digital cameras. I think the occasional selfie or food portrait聽(also guilty!) is a small price to pay for having a pocket-size聽recording device. With a camera on me at all times,聽I鈥檓 motivated to 鈥渟ee鈥 more often and am therefore聽constantly engaged.

The technology is only getting better, and聽taking more and better pictures will only get easier. I personally聽can鈥檛 wait to keep snapping away.

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