So, are you saying that these pros either used every shot on a roll of film
or that, if there were some they'd not use, they were cut out of the
negative strips, deleted from contact sheets, and tossed, never to be seen
again?  I can just imagine a photographer having shot a roll 220 film going
through the negs or transparencies and deciding that this or that frame was
not going to work, getting out a pair of scissors, cutting out that frame
or two, and tossing it.  Sorry, I don't buy it.  And I don't buy the idea
that every shot a photographer makes is usable immediately, and if it's not
it then has no value to the photographer.  No one has a 100% hit rate, I
don't care how good a photog they may be.  Even if you're a perfect
photographer, always getting perfect framing, perfect light, and perfect
exposures, there's always something that can ruin a shot or make one less
desirable or marketable than another.

Shooting to "learn" is sometimes a different situation, but unless the
results are saved, the learning process is truncated.  How can the photog
go back and compare the result from the photos made this month with the
ones made a month or two earlier and see where and how improvement has been
accomplished, if at all.

Shel 


> [Original Message]
> From: Kenneth Waller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: <[email protected]>
> Date: 12/29/2004 12:24:27 PM
> Subject: Re: Who has an istDS?
>
> On 12/29, Shel caused the following to appear on my CRT  -
> >"No, pros didn't throw away the bad ones.  They were saved on contact
> sheets
> > and negatives, and became valuable tools in both the editing process and
> > helping the photographer understand the shooting process."
>
> Not the practice of the several pro outdoor photogs I know. They long ago
> stopped shooting things they know wouldn't sell & they have shot enough,
> under most conditions, that there are very few situations they aren't
> photographically familiar with.
>
> If what you say were true then the current digital pro would most likely
be
> saving all digital images shot to learn the shooting process.
>
> Kenneth Waller
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Shel Belinkoff" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: <[email protected]>
> Sent: Wednesday, December 29, 2004 2:34 PM
> Subject: RE: Who has an istDS?
>
>
> > No, pros didn't throw away the bad ones.  They were saved on contact
> sheets
> > and negatives, and became valuable tools in both the editing process and
> > helping the photographer understand the shooting process.  many photogs
> > "shoot to a climax" and having all the frames available is most helpful.
> > And sometimes, years later, the "bad one" could turn out to be a money
> > maker, or have some value for a client.


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