Share article:
Share article:

Waiting For Mom
Henri Cartier-Bresson, arguably the most influential photographer of the twentieth century, said: “Photographing is nothing. Looking is everything.” This is a very wise statement that a lot of people ignore.
Photographers tend to get wrapped around the axle on equipment, which is understandable when you consider the complexity and capability of modern digital cameras. But the equipment has almost nothing to do with good photography. Looking has a great deal to do with it: looking and recognizing what you’re feeling as you look.
Preparations
To put it another way, successful visual art, especially great visual art, depends on the artist being able to bring ou...

Read this story and all the best stories on The Luminous Landscape

The author has made this story available to Luminous Landscape members only. Upgrade to get instant access to this story and other benefits available only to members.

Why choose us?

Luminous-Landscape is a membership site. Our website contains over 5300 articles on almost every topic, camera, lens and printer you can imagine. Our membership model is simple, just $2 a month ($24.00 USD a year). This $24 gains you access to a wealth of information including all our past and future video tutorials on such topics as Lightroom, Capture One, Printing, file management and dozens of interviews and travel videos.

  • New Articles every few days
  • All original content found nowhere else on the web
  • No Pop Up Google Sense ads – Our advertisers are photo related
  • Download/stream video to any device
  • NEW videos monthly
  • Top well-known photographer contributors
  • Posts from industry leaders
  • Speciality Photography Workshops
  • Mobile device scalable
  • Exclusive video interviews
  • Special vendor offers for members
  • Hands On Product reviews
  • FREE – User Forum. One of the most read user forums on the internet
  • Access to our community Buy and Sell pages; for members only.
Share article:
I'm an amateur, in the true meaning of that word. I've been making photographs since I built a darkroom in my parents' fruit cellar at thirteen. I did professional work (meaning I charged for it) for a brief period in the sixties, and hated it. I was born and raised in Michigan. I'd planned to get my degrees at University of Michigan and teach English Literature, but at the end of my junior year the Korean war was in full swing, and since there were no academic draft deferments my dorm was emptying out. I decided I'd rather fly than walk, so I entered the Air Force Aviation Cadet program and was flying fighter-bombers out of K2, the base at Taegu, when the war ended. After the war I started going downtown and shooting the local scene. I shot a lot of pictures of people. I was doing street photography though I didn't know it at the time. In 1955 when my Air Force commitment was up I considered becoming a photojournalist, but by then I had a family and I loved flying, so I stayed in the Air Force. During the next twenty-two years I went back to Asia twice: once as commander of a radar site at Can Tho in the Vietnam delta and nine years later as commander of the group that owned the remaining radar sites in Southeast Asia. I retired in 1977 as a full colonel and started a small corporation doing software engineering. At the end of 2008 I closed my company and began doing amateur photography full time. I'm still doing it. Over the years I've done plenty of landscape, wabi sabi, formal and informal portraiture, still life, etc., but my favorite thing since 1953 in Korea has been street photography. http://www.fineartsnaps.com
See all articles by this author

You may also like

Camera & Technology

Canon's VCM Technology: The Magnetic Force Behind Modern Lens Performance

Ever had your camera's autofocus noise scare away that perfect wildlife shot? Canon's VCM lenses focus in complete silence using electromagnetic motors that keep you...
Jon Swindall

Jon Swindall

·

August 10, 2025

·

6 minutes read


Photography Isn’t Creative
Camera & Technology

Photography Isn’t Creative

Photography isn’t creative. I know, those are fighting words. Please put down the pitch forks for a few minutes and let me explain the distinction I see.
Ed Schlotzhauer

Ed Schlotzhauer

·

August 1, 2025

·

7 minutes read