However a preplanned crop is not bad photography.

What if you see something as a square image, do you have to print it as an oblong because that is the camera format? Howabout if you plan a crop to eliminate distortion, as in photographing a building on the top end of a vertical frame and then cropping the foreground drastically to make it a horizontal? Cropping a tele-shot, as Tim mentioned, because you do not have a long enough lens with you to fill the frame is another of those kind of situations.

Now cropping to save a bad shot usually indicates the photographer, if he may be called such, is not doing his job --pure laziness.

graywolf
http://www.graywolfphoto.com
http://webpages.charter.net/graywolf
"Idiot Proof" <==> "Expert Proof"
-----------------------------------


William Robb wrote:

----- Original Message ----- From: "Tim Øsleby"
Subject: Composing on screen vs. in viewfinder.




What I'm saying is that I think I need the decisive moment to make a good
composition. I also need to be emotionally connected with the motif in
some
way.

But what do I do about this? Practise is one obvious answer. And I will
practise. But, I also have a strong belief in the power and wisdom of this list. I would really surprise me if it doesn't burp up some good ideas and
advise.


Good photography is good photography.
Period.
Bad photography is fixing it later, whether through large amounts of
darkroom manipulation, or massive amounts of Photoshopping (Sorry Tony, I
know it isn't a verb).
Don't know if this helps or not, and I am sure that some will disagree, but
they are probably adept at salvaging junk via Photoshop.
Strive to do as little post processing as possible, accept that this stuff is work, and be thankful that with digital, all it costs is your time (the most precious commodity you have).

William Robb




Reply via email to