Sometimes you find a secondary image within the one you took: this was the case 
with one of the
images in the gallery I put up of New York shots.  I didn't see the potential 
until after I'd left
the USA, so there was no chance of getting a new image of the subject.  
I have no problem with cropping, drastically or not, where extraneous elements 
that could not be
eliminated at the time are removed to get the image I was looking for, or where 
it was not possible
to frame the subject within the proportions of the viewfinder/sensor.

John in Brisbane



-----Original Message-----
From: PDML [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Stan Halpin
Sent: Wednesday, 25 January 2017 10:11 AM
To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Cropping



Sent from my iPad
> Eric Weir wrote:
>> I crop often. Sometimes radically. To focus more clearly on what interests 
>> me in the image. Am I
a terrible photographer?

Some wise voices have weighed in on this, I'll see if I can lower the tone 
somewhat.

If there is something that interests you in an image, why didn't you frame that 
element properly in
the beginning? Not intended as a criticism, but rather as a thought question. 
Ask yourself why you
didn't get it right to begin with. Too rushed? Careless? Wrong focal length?

I think cropping is a necessary evil. Sometimes you just can't get close 
enough, can't position
yourself to avoid the distracting foreground element, etc. But whenever I crop 
for composition (as
opposed to cropping to overcome the above mentioned problems) I consider it a 
minor, maybe even a
major failure on my part. Cropping for composition means I wasn't thinking 
clearly when I pushed the
shutter button. 

As it happens, I do crop often, I have many failures in that respect, in large 
part because I have
learned that it is easier to crop than to clone in a missing foot or elbow or 
other picture element
that I cut off by too tight a frame. I often travel to scenic places, often 
without tripod, and I
like to shoot handheld panos. Most often my failures result from too tight a 
framing in the first
place which doesn't allow enough margin to correct leveling issues when 
stitching. My goal is to
reduce the number of times I need to crop without increasing the number of 
amputated feet and to
increase my success rate with my pants.

stan

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