Unintentional Beauty
OR:
The Perfect is the Enemy of the Good
by Karin Brünnemann
Recently, I wanted to take a photo of Moon and Mars, as they were visible close to each other. As I did not apply the correct camera settings, the results were not as expected. The exposure time was far too long for me to hold the camera still, capturing a powerful streak instead of the lunar sphere and only a faint doodle of our neighboring planet. My immediate thought was to remove the picture, but my thumb hovered above the delete icon. Wait a minute. This is not what I had imagined – but wasn’t there something beautiful in this celestial image? Something captivating? Something out of this world? I decided to keep the photo, corrected my camera settings, and took a “proper” photo as I originally intended. I did manage to capture the heavenly bodies in close proximity in all their beauty, however, compared to the “failed” strong and streaky shot, this photo appeared rather unspectacular, vacuous.