_____________________________________
I am one who subscribes to the notion that Adams' real
genius was not in his subjects, nor his exposure
techniques, but his mastery of and in the darkroom.
And so, "The Negative" speaks to that end.
+Imagine how busy he must have been, "bracketing" with
a field camera!
Ed
Iget it done with YAHOO! DSL!
--- Lukasz Kacperczyk <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hmmm, the problem is, in Poland we don't have these
> books as easily
> available as in the States (or just *available* for
> that matter). I have an
> opportunity to buy "The Negative", and I though I'd
> ask here before doing
> it.
>
> Regards,
> Lukasz
Re: OT: [wanted] thoughts on Adams's
> "Negative"
>
>
> > In that case you might be more interested in:
> >
> > *Examples: The Making of 40 Photographs* instead
> of *The Negative*
> >
> > >Hi there,
> > >
> > >I'm mostly interested in the contents of the
> book. How much of the book
> is
> > >about the zone system, developing and exposing
> negatives, and how much is
> > >about taking pictures ("philosophy" and all)? I'd
> buy it if the "taking
> > >pictures" part were the longest.
> > >
> > >Thanks in advance.
> > >
> > >Regards,
> > >?ukasz
> > >
=====
Matt Greene
I get it done with YAHOO! DSL!