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Photography Group Archive

The Photography Group Archive remembers past themes of our member artist photography meetups.

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Café Stories (Sep-Oct 2025)

Zoom Meeting October 30, 2025. 6-8pm

Theme and meeting host: Ward Bell

The "Café Stories" Theme

 

We are looking for images - set in a café, bar or restaurant - that inspire stories.

The ideal image captures a pivotal moment in a story. It's not certain what that story is; there is no obvious reading. But there clearly is a story being told and some viewers think they know what that story is; they want to tell the story; they have answers to questions such as ...

  • Who are the people in the story?

  • What brought them here?

  • How do they know each other?

  • How do they feel about each other?

  • What are they doing or saying?

  • How will they feel later?

  • What will they do next? Why?

As their minds race backward and forward, suddenly they realize that they have been in this story themselves - or something like it. Maybe they were one of these people, faced similar choices, felt the same comfort or anxiety. Do they feel regret? Could they have done differently? What then?

Discussion Flow

The meeting to discuss these images will run a little differently.

We still have a lightning round with 5 minutes per artist. The artist selects a primary image and asks the group "what is the story?".

The artist may not say what the story is. At most, the artist may suggest a title to spur the group in a direction.

 

You may not answer questions about the story. You may not answer questions about how you composed the shot, your techniques, your inspirations. The group agrees not to tell you that it's a lovely image. The aesthetics are worth talking about later but not at this moment.

How do I know I have a good image?

 

The success of your image in this forum depends entirely upon how the group responds.

 

This is a collaboration between you and the group. You provide the image; they provide the story. If you hear only banalities, you know that you've missed; move on to the next image. If the group is talking over itself, each member trying to tell its version of the story or amplify another's story, you know that you have a hit.

You may want to preview your image with a friend or two before the meeting to see if it generates the kind or interest and response that you are hoping for.

Why set in a "café"?

In truth, the café setting is an arbitrary constraint, intended to drive you into the arms of your camera. While a café is preferred, any food-and-drink setting is acceptable.

 

You might already have a good story-photograph that you could pluck from your personal library. I doubt that you have a café story in your portfolio.  To contribute to this theme gallery, you'll probably have to create an image while the strictures of this theme are at the top of mind.

You might find the perfect image in a surreptitious candid shot; lucky you! But it might be more fun and effective to stage the shot with friends as actors.

This is a difficult assignment. Fortunately, it's equally difficult for both the amateur and professional photographer. Camera skills and aesthetics always important. But they are not the focus of the discussion at this meetup.

After the lightning round

It would be great to discuss how this assignment did or did not work for you. Does this approach bear repeating or never again.

Inspirations

Many images inspired this theme, starting with Vermeer's "Mistress and Maid".  I've collected a few of them on a separate page with my thoughts on how they demonstrate an aspect of story telling we hope to pursue in this theme.

2025-vermeer-frick-mistress-maid-19191126-2000.jpg
cindy-sherman-no90.jpg
Nighthawks_by_Edward_Hopper_1942.jpg
currin-stamford-after-brunch.jpg
beaux-dorothea-francesca.jpg

Urban Light  (July - Aug, 2025)

Zoom Meeting August 21, 2025. 6-8pm

Urban areas could be small towns or large cities - anywhere there is a density of people and human made structures such as residential housing,  commercial buildings, industrial buildings, roads, bridges, railroads, man-made lakes, and parks.

 

Words such as "exciting", "diverse", "sophisticated", "formal", "architectural", "edgy", "crowded", "blighted" are often associated with urban settings.

 

Try photographing the urban landscape in the warm soft glow of dawn and dusk ("Golden Hour"), or the bright harsher "Midday Light" that creates high contrast, sharp shadows and bright colors, or with "Night Light" combining artificial and natural light for dramatic, "noir" effects; the options for creating interesting photographs are endless. Have fun!

Theme and meeting host: Sharon Taylor-Ward

Checkout these YouTube videos for advice and inspiration

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