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John Shaw: John Shaw: A Photographer's Vision Simplified

John Shaw is a Nikon Legend Behind the Lens

It comes down to one word: simplify.

"The more you simplify your vision, the stronger your images will be," John Shaw says.

One of the foremost nature, outdoor and natural history photographers in the world, John is the author of six books on photography, and his photographs have appeared in, among others, National Geographic, Audubon, Smithsonian and Sierra magazines.

"A friend of mine, the photographer David Middleton, has an analogy which I shamelessly steal," John says. "David says that a bad photograph is a paragraph; a good photograph is a sentence; a great photograph is a phrase. I think there's a lot to that.

"A beginner frequently takes a wide-angle lens and tries to record the world in one shot. What he usually gets is visual chaos." To bring order to the confusion, place fewer elements in your composition. "You can train yourself to find the essential elements. Ask yourself these questions: What is it that specifically turns me on visually about this scene? What is it that excites me? What's the essence here? Now, how do I eliminate everything else? A lot of it is training, and people can learn to do it."

Not much of it is about equipment. "People think, oh, if only I had this particular lens, I'd be a better photographer. That's not it at all." The vision comes first, John suggests; then get the lens—or whatever piece of equipment—that will enable you to capture that vision.

What it is about is practice. "I gained a better sense of composition by working at it, by taking a lot of pictures." Professionals do that—they take a lot of pictures, and you might think that puts amateurs at a disadvantage. But it's the seeing that can be as important as the taking. "People don't look very often, they don't use their vision. They sort of turn it off when they put the camera down."

What John says echoes what we've heard from other photographers: You should always be seeing, whether you're holding the camera or not. Standing in line at the bank, stuck in traffic, look around, discover where the elements and the images are. Play a little game called "Where's the picture here?"