Upcoming – New Visions of New Zealand, with Roy Robertson

Next up is our last Speaker’s Night of the season, and we will be welcoming Roy Robertson from Dundee PS. Roy has judged for us several times in recent years, which is quite telling in itself. This time he’s with us as a speaker, and his title is ‘New visions of New Zealand’. The supporting image he gave us at the start of the season, for our Programme page, is as mysterious now as it was then. This should be a great evening.  

http://www.perthshirephotographicsociety.org.uk/2022/06/programme-2022-23/#01-march-2023

New faces are still welcome to attend two weeks on a trial basis, to see if you’d like to join us for the season. For those who are ready to join, the online Membership Form for the season is open. The membership subscription reduces by 50% after New Year, and the £27.50 can be paid by BACS or by cheque – details are in the membership form.

Last Night – The Colour Rosebowl

230222 Last Night Colour Rosebowl Andy Hayes

For the Colour Rosebowl competition we hosted Andy Hayes as judge. He started out by describing role being more as a ‘reviewer’ than a ‘judge’, and proceeded to review our 36 prints with perception and generosity. Over the course of of the evening, he fleshed out his comments about our own entries in particular with broader advice about the art and science of printing in general.

Take care with monitor brightness, and calibrate your monitor if you can (PPS has a calibrator for members’ use). Choose your paper to show your subject to best advantage. If possible, select a printing profile to suit the specific combination of printer and paper. Bigger prints aren’t always best, and a small print in a mount can look wonderful. Tidy mounts matter, as does the placement of the aperture in the board, to support the print both artistically and structurally.

To illustrate his point about paper choice, Andy had brought along five prints, being the exact same image (lions in a tree) printed on five different types of paper – gloss, semi gloss, metallic pearl, fine art, and matt – and these attracted great interest in the tea break.

The comments from members afterwards were enthusiastic – we’d not only had an evening enjoying each others prints, with expert commentary, but we’d learned some very practical tips on how to make our prints even more impactful.

Upcoming – the Colour Rosebowl competition

This week will see us enjoying the last internal Print competition of the season, the Colour Rosebowl. It’s for up to three prints per member, and the subject matter and treatment is left to the author’s choosing. 

Our visiting SPF udge will be Andy Hayes from Fettercairn, on what we think is probably his first visit to PPS. Andy has a particular interest in conservation photography, in support of protecting the wildlife of the Cairngorms and beyond.

http://www.perthshirephotographicsociety.org.uk/2022/06/programme-2022-23/#22-february-2023

New faces are still welcome to attend two weeks on a trial basis, to see if you’d like to join us for the season. For those who are ready to join, the online Membership Form for the season is open. The membership subscription reduces by 50% after New Year, and the £27.50 can be paid by BACS or by cheque – details are in the membership form.

Last Night – Four of our own

Another Members’ Night last night, and another evening upstairs in the Sandeman Room. The presenters get to sit if they wish; we get to see the images on the large-screen telly rather than projected; and we get to sit closer to both the images and to each other. All of this works to the benefit of the evening for those who come, and yesterday we were so many we had to fetch extra chairs.

We had a chance to hear from two of us who joined this year. David Allan gave an overview of his ’50 years, but not counting’ photographic journey, from a Zenit 35mm wih no film in, to a modern digital, with a consistent sense of fun. Bob Bain showed us what he’s been doing to capture images of wildlife with varying numbers of legs – birds, mammals, butterflies and spiders, and even some fish.

We also heard from Tom Ryan speaking about some of the legal and ethical aspects of street photography, taking photographs of people unawares, and the gradations between public and private spaces. And after the break, David Hay wowed us with more of his images, this time from winter walks near his home in snow, frost and mist. Some of the conditions he captured lasted mere minutes. His motto last night – ‘when in doubt, go out’.

Upcoming – Members’ Night: Four More Speakers

This week will be a Members’ Night, with four speakers from our midst 

  • David Allan – 50 years, but not counting
  • Bob Bain – The Wildlife around us
  • David Hay – Winter photography – more seasonal images taken during lockdown
  • Tom Ryan – Street Photography – What are the legal and ethical issues around taking pictures of people in public places?

http://www.perthshirephotographicsociety.org.uk/2022/06/programme-2022-23/#15-february-2023

New faces are still welcome to attend two weeks on a trial basis, to see if you’d like to join us for the season. For those who are ready to join, the online Membership Form for the season is open. The membership subscription reduces by 50% after New Year, and the £27.50 can be paid by BACS or by cheque – details are in the membership form.

Last Night – the SPF Portfolio, with David Hay

The SPF Portfolio competition is held each autumn, and images are rated as 2, 3, 4 or 5 by each of 3 judges, giving a range of scores from 6 to 15. Afterwards, each participating club is sent DVD with a slideshow of the ‘accepted’ entries – those scoring 11 or more. And each year, our very own David Hay talks us through the show, pointing out emerging trends, creative flourishes, un-noticed errors, and insights into ‘the making of’ many of the images.

We looked at the Mono acceptances before tea, which featured four PPS images: Omar – Me and my shadow; Sandie – Boy on the bike; Wol – Sound of sunshine; Tim – Wailing widow falls.

And after tea, we looked at the Colour ones, including PPS images from: Annette – Ice bird; John – Mountain hare; Omar – Skye 2; Omar – Skye 3; Tom – Tokyo train trip lady; Ian – Lighting up time at kirkjufell; Hillary – Loch Linhie rain squall; Tom – Tokyo skyscrapers.

How did we get so many acceptance? In part because our images are good. And in part because we entered a lot of them – over 75 – curated in a wee Facebook group we set up for the purpose. This let all the authors get some peer-review input, to improve the learning all round, and to select images with a good chance of doing well.

Upcoming – SPF Portfolio night

This week will be Portfolio night. We’ll take a look at the high-scoring images as entered, by clubs from around Scotland, to last year’s SPF Portfolio competition. Images will be provided on DVD by the Scottish Photographic Federation; commentary will be by David Hay, who is one of our most experienced members, and who has served as a SPF judge for many years. 

http://www.perthshirephotographicsociety.org.uk/2022/06/programme-2022-23/#08-february-2023

New faces are still welcome to attend two weeks on a trial basis, to see if you’d like to join us for the season. For those who are ready to join, the online Membership Form for the season is open. The membership subscription reduces by 50% after New Year, and the £27.50 can be paid by BACS or by cheque – details are in the membership form. 

Last Night – Nan Borthwick and Peter Rourke Salver competitions

As our judge for the Nan Borthwick and Peter Rourke Salver competitions we welcomed Eva Christie, local creative, reformed musician (her words!), and director of the Scottish Yarn Festival and the Scottish Wool Producers Showcase, to bring a fresh perspective on the photography of our entrants.

It is our custom to invite visiting judges to start by sharing with us a little of their own work, and Eva described her visual axes as being of colour and texture. As she talked through her impressions, and what she liked about each image, her thoughtfulness became clear.

As one of our number emailed afterwards – ” I thought Eva had done a superb job as a judge and had clearly put a lot of thought and work into the task of being a judge. It gave us a refreshing different outlook on our hobby. Well done to the Committee for getting her”.

Quite so. She’d looked — she’d really looked – at all the images. What better compliment can anyone pay to our images than to look at them?

The top picture shows Eva with Sandie and her winning entry in the Peter Rourke. And, significantly, a happy-looking audience! Winning images are, as always, posted on our galleries pages as we get them.