Any time I embark on something new in photography, there’s a learning curve. I started photographing rodeos last summer, and each arena presents new challenges. Rodeos are almost always held at night, under the glare of bright stadium lights (if I’m lucky). Getting close enough to the action for a decent shot can be tricky, and photogenic moments don’t last long. Capturing all of this on an analog camera, and not being able to see the shots in the moment to correct camera settings, only compounds the difficulty. I really never know how the photos are going to turn out until I process the film.
But as they say in the biz, this ain’t my first rodeo. Just kidding, they don’t actually say that, but I’ve got a few rodeos under my oversized belt-buckle by now, and I’m gradually figuring out what works—where I need to station myself, what’s my best range, exactly how to make those big bright lights work in my favor.
These photos were taken at the Longbranch rodeo in Powhatan on May 27th on Ilford Delta 3200 35mm film. Longbranch has another rodeo scheduled in a couple weeks, on July 22nd, which also happens to be my birthday. After seeing this film developed, I have some ideas for how to make the next set better.
I’m pretty sure they do say in the biz, if you fall off the horse, you get back on.
Thank you for reading, you’re beautiful.