My own personal goal is to optimize the image, on site, in the camera, and
not have to crop or clone anything later on. But I will crop after if I've
missed something in the initial image. However, if you know the composition
isn't perfect and you take the shot anyhow, and you can correct it later
with cropping, you are probably not using the "right lens" or you haven't
scoped out the scene for a better "point of view.
Ken Waller
----- Original Message -----
From: Artur Ledóchowski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, March 02, 2001 5:36 PM
Subject: Re: An important step


> Hi,
> I think it's important to try to shoot as perfectly as it's possible, but
if
> the composition isn't that perfect, then the point is to KNOW IT and know
> what to cut away to get that perfect composition in the second step:)
> Greetz
> Artur
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "tom" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sent: Friday, March 02, 2001 8:29 PM
>
> > That's ideal. However, some people seem to think there's something wrong
> > with cropping. I'm just saying I don't: I like to get it perfect in the
> > finder, but if I don't, I have no problem cutting away.
> >
>
>
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>

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