Every time I write something I get pounced on. I am critical of about 99% of photographs being taken today. This is due in part to the equipment used to take them and partly due to technique. With the advance of digital, photographers have become lazy. They appear to believe that the camera can do anything and everything for them including focus the camera, set the correct DOF and ideal shutter speed, and yet nothing could be further from the truth. Manufacturers set their products to produce a ‘good enough’ picture, and if one is going to shoot on P or A, you get what somebody else wants, not what you prefer. So for this week’s comments, the daisies are not evoking anything for as this is a case where the camera needs to be on a tripod and the lens needs to be a macro type lens. The ‘Dogs” is really about legs and a bum and the photographer is afraid to say so, and the cathedral shot is crying out for a tripod and more careful management of the DOF. I could see it if the pew immediately in front of the camera were sharp and the rest of the church OOF, but this image is not taken with a sufficient F-stop to produce a focused shot at the apparent point of interest. The face in the tree is nice, but not a great shot. It seems to me that what is missing from all of these shots is planning, vision, perhaps a tripod for spotty lighting conditions like a church, and more control of the cameras. If you want compose a photo, compose it carefully and take the bloody camera off NORMAL. IF you need to shoot with a slower shutter speed in the church for e example, brace yourself on the pew in front of you, sit down, and take the shot where you control the DOF. The world is not set for AUTO photography. Good photographs take vision and work. Doesn’t anybody read how to books any more? Get a John Hedgecoe or (God forbid) an Ansel Adams book on technique and READ IT. A Samsung manual is not a good place to discover tips on how to make good pictures. And as far as Photoshop is concerned, you cannot make garbage into a great shot with PS anything. If used to be said that you can’t make a sow’s ear into a silk purse and that goes to photographs too. There i a lurker on this list named Palma Brozetti and Palma made a wonderful shot of Market Street in the snow and it so obviously completed the tasks of good composition and exposure that it is a great shot. I’m sure she steadied herself, perhaps used a tripod and was careful with the exposure The ‘je ne c’est quois’ in her picture of Market St is what is missing from this week’s gallery selections. Yes, I know I’m being a bit harsh, but I do photography for a living and to stand out, you have to stand out. This does not mean that I think I’m the best photographer out there, as I am firmly convinced that there is no ‘best’ photographer. But if you treat the making of your images like they could be great art, then success will come. What I am waiting for is for somebody to win a Pulitzer Prize with an iPhone camera. I’m sure it will happen. Canon and NIkon used to be the biggest sellers of cameras, but now it’s Apple. Jan Faul OOF - Out Of Focus DOF - Depth Of Field On Aug 17, 2012, at 1:12 AM, asharpe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
Art Faul The Artist Formerly Known as Prints ------ Stills That Move: http://www.artfaul.com Greens: http://www.inkjetprince.com Camera Works - The Washington Post |