I have been wanting to explore Shutterfly for some time, but because I pay for a Flickr account and have spent considerable time with Picasa, it seemed like just one more version of what I have been recommending. In the back of mind what I knew was unique about Shutterfly was that while it was a photo sharing site it also offered a way to offer general web content. This struck me as an important distinction.
A few days ago I came across this strange post on MarketWatch (strange because MarketWatch is not exactly the place I search for ideas for the classroom). The business oriented post that includes the present stock market value of Shutterfly explained Shutterfly’s effort to offer classroom web sites. The article explains that parents would like to see images from the classroom and from student field trips, but providing such images is difficult because of security concerns. So, Shutterfly has offered a version of the tool allowing the creation of web sites to meet this and other classroom to home communication needs. The classroom web sites are by invitation only which is the way the teacher or a parent volunteer controls access. While Shutterfly’s main business model is printing user photographs in various formats (images, calendars, photo books) and photos are clearly what Shutterfly does well, the template and modular-based approach makes it relatively easy to create an impressive site.
Year end always brings goals and resolutions for the year to come. The goal of taking and sharing a picture a day received some attention within this general discussion and Cindy thought it sounded interesting. We have made the commitment to give it a try.
As I thought about the concept, it occurred to me that I had encountered it before. Under my coffee table (now the table in my office that holds my Tivo, AppleTV and HD TV) is a book by Jim Brandenburg – Looking for the Summer. I think of Brandenburg as the nature photographer from this area famous for his wolf images, but this book is a one picture per day thing. I thought the book was based on an even more challenge premise – take only one photograph per day – but in rereading the Intro I learned that this was an earlier Brandenburg book – Chased by the light. I remember that self challenge and have always been impressed. Impressed, but not sure that I exactly understand the point. Perhaps it involves a personal commitment to perfection. My personal standards are not so high. I find life with all options available, even some second takes, about as challenging as I can handle.
Then, I remember seeing a news story about a photographer, a college prof if I recall correctly, who walks to the same location each day and takes the same picture. I also tend to remember this as a Minnesota photographer. I tried to find this collection online and failed. Perhaps someone will recognize the individual or can identify a related web site.
The 365 photos project (there seem to be several) is presented in several ways. Version 1 – improve yourself as a photographer. Version 2 – reflect on or photoblog your life. There are perhaps other foci as well.
There must be some interesting educational versions (e.g., Middle School Matrix, CogDogBlog). Perhaps a photograph from each school day. Seems like this is a little different than a photoblog. Instead of “here is something interesting I encountered”, think “this is what was interesting today”. Perhaps this is about realizing that there are interesting things around us at all times. Isn’t that what good photographers are able to show us? Things that we see, but don’t really SEE.
Our own plans are still a little sketchy and I not sure yet how we will format our final version. We are presently just uploading images to my Flickr account and attaching the 365 tag. Our personal rules are simple – the picture must be taken on that day. I think “taken” is close enough for me. If necessary, I think I will let upload and annotate slide a little. So far, three days and three images. I wonder how long we will go before we forget? Will I get out of bed when I remember and trudge outside in the snow to find something I can photograph with my Blackberry? Actually, this may increase the likelihood that I will carry my phone with me a little more. We will see.
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