エピソード

  • Ep.3 - Healing Lens: Photography as a Coping Mechanism
    2026/03/26

    A contest-winning photo can look “just beautiful” until you hear what it cost to make it. We’re joined by Kate, one of the very first students to take our Kids and Cameras workshop, and now a high school senior shooting photojournalism for her school district while preparing to study mechanical engineering at the University of Arkansas.

    Kate walks us through how she first learned photography, why in-person help made ISO, aperture, and shutter speed finally click, and what changed when she won a mirrorless camera in our Emotions In Nature contest. The heart of the conversation is the story behind her winning image: a frog rising above the water, captured right after she left a behavioral hospital while navigating PTSD. She explains how photography became a coping mechanism, a way to slow down, notice her surroundings, and give her emotions somewhere honest to go. We also talk about the power of pairing an artist statement with an image so the story is not lost.

    From there we get practical about growth: shifting from nature photography into candid photos of people, school events, parades, and even car meets, plus what makes mirrorless cameras feel so freeing in everyday life. We dig into photojournalism as documenting history, the pressure to “pick a niche,” and why seeing someone’s raw misses can be more motivating than scrolling their perfect Instagram grid.

    Subscribe to Kids and Cameras on YouTube, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify, share this with a young photographer in your life, and leave a review. What’s one photo you took that means more than it looks like at first glance?

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    38 分
  • Ep. 2 - Emotions in Focus: Seeing Beyond the Image
    2026/02/26

    Feelings leave fingerprints on every frame. We dive into the emotional language of photography, why some images roar with adrenaline while others whisper with stillness, and how context can rewrite meaning long after the shutter closes. From a red-lit stage jump to a quiet lake at sunset, we show how seeing, naming, and directing emotion turns good photos into lasting stories.

    We open with concert images that contrast explosive motion with reflective power, then trace how a portrait of Juice WRLD transformed after his passing. That shift leads to a bigger idea: photos stay the same, our understanding evolves. Along the way, we unpack personal lessons about ego and business, why letting go of a beloved studio unlocked smarter decisions, and the craft challenge of balancing consistency with creative feeling so clients know what they’ll get without losing your soul.

    You’ll hear the making of two gallery pieces that center on Black identity, an afro as a crown of “Rise” and a silhouette of locs in motion, plus a crystal ball landscape that flips perspective to change the mood. We break down the patience behind lightning captures, the joy of motion blur at a New York skating rink, and the empathy of a black-and-white street scene where struggle and hope share a frame. We also step into commercial thinking: reading client emotions, shaping product lighting for clarity and desire, and guiding portraits that honor who people are. It all rounds out with a celebration image from an OKC championship parade, where preparation met the moment and confidence felt earned.

    If you care about creative growth, emotional awareness, and practical techniques you can use on your next shoot, this one’s for you. Subscribe, share with a friend who loves photography, and leave a review telling us which image or idea changed how you’ll shoot next.

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    1 時間