It may occasion another PM exchange with someone who doesn't agree, but drat for the hundredth time the lack of the multi-quote button on APUG. Done via lots of aborted replies with quotes and Notepad...
I do not recognise the term.
Photographs are not snapped and they certainly are not taken.
They are made.
Some of mine I feel are made, some taken. If I had to make a distinction I'd say it revolved around how much departure from reality the final image shows. That's a trap laden concept because black and white, which is mostly what I do, is a departure from reality by definition. And color films all differ and none have the range of human vision and none reproduce color perfectly so that is too, albeit probably to a lesser extent.
But some images are shot at relatively normal exposure and development and printed to "normal looking" tones that are similar to a straightforward rendering of the scene, with little to no dodging and burning. Those are probably more "taken." Others look nothing like the original scene and are probably more "made."
Even this is not straightforward. If you have to burn down the sky quite a bit to get it to look like it looked to you by eye at the time, what is that?
Ultimately I don't think it matters which of these terms one uses.
What about it is it that you 'make' that wasn't already there?
Not that it wasn't there, but the relative emphasis of different areas are easily changed in the darkroom, the contrast can deviate radically from what was there - a contrasty scene can be printed more flatly or, much more often probably, a scene in very flat light can be boosted in contrast. It looks less like the scene than it would otherwise, but may make a better image, assuming pictorial accuracy isn't the aim.
Sometimes one, sometimes the other. A foolish consistency...
I've always thought that, when I snap the shutter, I "take". When I'm in the darkroom, I "make". In truth, I'm not at all concerned with the terminology.
I kind of think of it like that too, but I agree that too much emphasis on terminology serves no purpose and is a distraction.
I will disagree with this only because not-thinking is as far away from the "Zen experience" as over-thinking.
It is the decision to make or not make an image -- and the mental gymnastics one may or may not do to reach that decision -- that defines the "Zen experience". It is not the speed in which one goes about making the image, once the decision is made. In The Art of Zen Archery, it is how the arrow is released that matters, not the speed in which one draws and fires.
Otherwise, one is just using the shotgun affect by snapping away. So my point is that even when one takes 30 minutes to set up a 8x10 camera and expose a sheet of film, that image has as much of a possibility of being in a "Zen experience" as one might have exposing 36 exposures in 10 minutes with a 35mm.
Both have the potential of spontinatity. (sorry for the sp).
Vaughn
Bravo! Bravo! Well said!
I think working with my 4x5 is more "Zen like"
most of the time than shooting 35mm, but that's certainly not hard and fast.
Agree! Putting terms as how it is done has possibility of spawning "format wars", where folks who are LF vs say 35 square off and the HCB gets thrown in there and none of it makes any sense. Take photographs, how ever one wishes, and call it a day
In the words of a blue grass musician I know, "shut up and pick."
Photographers could take a clue from that. Shut up and shoot, or shut up and print. Better yet, shut up and shoot and print.
Snappers like Friedlander, Winogrand, and Cartier-Bresson, who never stopped and looked at what was in front of them, never pondered it, and never knew exactly what was on the film until they winnowed the contact sheets ask what I cannot give: To put through my mind stuff they didn't bother putting through theirs.
Frankly, what a crock. I've seen the display of HCB that was at the Atlanta High Museum recently. It's nothing like my style, but it was superb none the less. The fact that someone does something radically different from what I'm trying to do doesn't make it unvaluable, or mean I can't appreciate it.
They are the best, I had a fresh one pan fried on Tuesday night with chips and salad and few (too many) beers
My fiance does a Snapper Vera Cruz that's delicious. Red snapper covered with diced tomatoes and jalapenos. Mmmmmm....