Being behind the camera is both my happy place and - curiously - my unhappy place. When things aren't going well and it doesn't seem to be working, it's incredibly stressful and frustrating. But when things start going right, and I start taking good photos, I don't think I could
My happy place: Jane Ussher, photographer
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For photographer Jane Ussher happiness can be about ``waiting and looking''.
Spirits Bay, right up at the tip of Northland, meant a lot to me, and I'm not sure why. It did feel spiritual, the way the waves came into the bay, the birdlife there. There were hardly any people when we were there and it was very early in the morning. It was a place that stays in my mind.
I left school not sure what I wanted to do, and did a Wellington Polytechnic photography course. It felt exactly right. It suited every aspect of my temperament. I couldn't have found anything better.
I enjoy observing, and I'm interested in making beautiful photos, and I like setting things up and framing things. All those elements worked together to turn me into the sort of photographer I am.
The way I shoot is quite regimented, and I like the process that it leads me through. Once I'm set up and committed to a photo, I would normally never leave without having a result I was at least content with.
- as told to Bronwyn Sell