If you shoot film and print in the darkroom, then ypu're using the right tool. 
But PS does do the same thing. "A different perspective of a real world" is a 
bit of mumbo jumbo. Film is just a chemical process. Digital is an electronic 
process. They both reproduce what's in front of the camera. A shift lens moves 
the film plane. PhotoShop moves the pixels. They're comparable. And they're 
equally real. But to each their own.
Paul
On Jan 23, 2011, at 5:56 PM, Nick David Wright wrote:

> I don't shoot digitally.
> 
> And PS doesn't do the same thing.
> 
> The lens captures a different perspective of a real world.
> 
> PS only imitates that by creating a computer simulation of the real image.
> 
> If that's fine for you, so be it. It crosses a line for me.
> 
> On Sun, Jan 23, 2011 at 4:51 PM, Paul Stenquist <[email protected]> 
> wrote:
>> PhotoShop controls do the same thing the shift and tilt lenses do -- they 
>> rearrange reality. Whether you move the pixels or the film plane matters not 
>> in terms of final results. And if you're shooting digital, it's already 
>> "digital art."
>> Paul
> 
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