Can you say "photoshop"?

Old Oak

A
Old Oak

  • 0
  • 0
  • 8
Rose in small vase

D
Rose in small vase

  • 0
  • 0
  • 13
Sparrow.jpg

A
Sparrow.jpg

  • 2
  • 0
  • 79
Orlovka river valley

A
Orlovka river valley

  • 7
  • 0
  • 137
Norfolk coast - 2

A
Norfolk coast - 2

  • 6
  • 1
  • 159

Recent Classifieds

Forum statistics

Threads
197,850
Messages
2,765,712
Members
99,488
Latest member
colpe
Recent bookmarks
0

darkosaric

Member
Joined
Apr 15, 2008
Messages
4,568
Location
Hamburg, DE
Format
Multi Format
As new in Hamburg was looking for some new photo stores and one that was recommended to me is:

http://www.photohaus.de/index.php?id=63

And when you go to gallery of photohaus:

http://www.photohaus-galerie.de/


you can see old historical photos (that are great):

http://www.photohaus-galerie.de/index.php?id=74

and new photos (that are heavy photoshoped and no good) - any other link in gallery part.

I think people over photoshop their work because they want to hide emptiness and meaningless with shining technique. It works for masses … but not in apug :smile:.
 

Marc B.

Member
Joined
Oct 24, 2010
Messages
357
Location
USA, Pac/NW
Format
Multi Format
Yes, of course!
Sure...many of those photographs have received their fair share of post-processing manipulation.
Why, not?
Those submitted entries are basically art contest submissions, and therefore, are not bound
to the constraints of photo journalistic realism.

Marc
 
OP
OP

HTF III

Member
Joined
Apr 18, 2013
Messages
133
Format
Multi Format
I do Photoshop every day in my business. Here's a sample. When I do photography, it is honest work.
 

Attachments

  • Weiler.jpg
    Weiler.jpg
    623.8 KB · Views: 175
OP
OP

HTF III

Member
Joined
Apr 18, 2013
Messages
133
Format
Multi Format
I've discovered that the link presents different pictures in different orders each time you click on it. When I first opened the thread it was because I had seen a string of multiple nature and scenic photos that were obvious photoshop jobs. It's just dirty pool to me, in words that I can't gather.
 

removed account4

Subscriber
Joined
Jun 21, 2003
Messages
29,833
Format
Hybrid
burning and dodging in the darkroom
and dodging while exposing
using slow or fast shutter speeds
or fast / slow films
apertures
developing the film ( or paper negative or glass plate &c)
a certain way ... in a certain developer because it may do something
"extra special" ( or not )
toning bleaching

... its all manipulation

who cares what awards are given out for mastery of their process ...
its a process just as much as the traditional ones ...
 

EASmithV

Member
Joined
Aug 22, 2008
Messages
1,984
Location
Virginia
Format
Large Format
I agree with JNanian. I've starter running my color scans through lightroom.

After first spending so much time on APUG, i was extremely reluctant to do this at the least.
But I found, that by using the simple tools provided, I was able to create a better image.
Now, maybe i'm conservative with any "modifications" I do to the images.
But in the end, the image content is king, and by going completely hybrid for my LF color neg work, It gives me a better image overall.
And in the end, that's all that matters, to me. Sure, some over-do it, but this high-falutent sense of purity only goes so far, when your perfect pure photograph is of a damn rock and a stick or a tree.
 

jp498

Member
Joined
Oct 5, 2009
Messages
1,525
Location
Owls Head ME
Format
Multi Format
OP, you must quickly stop to learn caring who wins photo contests and their styles.
 
OP
OP

HTF III

Member
Joined
Apr 18, 2013
Messages
133
Format
Multi Format
Looks like I've been resoundingly thrashed on this one, huh? Oh well.As for me, I'll keep on using my film and not mix it with a computer. Maybe it's because I've got to put my label jobs together on a computer before making the plates. And regular photography is where I can make pictures and stay away from the blasted computer.
 

pstake

Subscriber
Joined
May 5, 2005
Messages
728
Format
Multi Format
Looks like I've been resoundingly thrashed on this one, huh? Oh well.As for me, I'll keep on using my film and not mix it with a computer. Maybe it's because I've got to put my label jobs together on a computer before making the plates. And regular photography is where I can make pictures and stay away from the blasted computer.

I agree with you, HTF. And with Darko.

I think the journalist's "creed" is that any manipulation should be to help the photo better reflect what is actually there.

And the chief gripe you're making is that photoshop has been used to make photos that are, whatever — pretty, I guess — but don't actually reflect what was there.

As someone said, these are not journalists and likely don't give two boots about the ethics of photography.

It's very, very simliar to karaoke night at ye olde pub.
 
Joined
Jul 1, 2008
Messages
5,462
Location
.
Format
Digital
My major concern with the Sony Award is plagiarism, especially the Australian Waterpolo Team pose during an Australian 2012 Olympic Games portrait session. This image smacks of [Australian photographer] Max Dupain's work at Bondi decades ago. There are some very good images worthy of attention. The surrealist depiction of The Matterhorn is not a product of Photoshop, but a product of chance and preparedness. In the right conditions this is as real as an aurora at that altitude and relatively easy to photograph. A high ISO (4000-6000) and 30 second Tv is all that is needed, and many alpinists come away with much the same image.
 

Sirius Glass

Subscriber
Joined
Jan 18, 2007
Messages
50,216
Location
Southern California
Format
Multi Format
I agree with JNanian. I've starter running my color scans through lightroom.

After first spending so much time on APUG, i was extremely reluctant to do this at the least.
But I found, that by using the simple tools provided, I was able to create a better image.
Now, maybe i'm conservative with any "modifications" I do to the images.
But in the end, the image content is king, and by going completely hybrid for my LF color neg work, It gives me a better image overall.
And in the end, that's all that matters, to me. Sure, some over-do it, but this high-falutent sense of purity only goes so far, when your perfect pure photograph is of a damn rock and a stick or a tree.

However some of the photographs no longer reflect reality on planet Earth. That is the point of the OP. If one is offended because they also invent reality, the problem is really in them. The OP did not complain about touchups.
 

bobwysiwyg

Subscriber
Joined
Mar 28, 2008
Messages
1,627
Location
Ann Arbor, M
Format
Multi Format
burning and dodging in the darkroom
and dodging while exposing
using slow or fast shutter speeds
or fast / slow films
apertures
developing the film ( or paper negative or glass plate &c)
a certain way ... in a certain developer because it may do something
"extra special" ( or not )
toning bleaching

... its all manipulation

who cares what awards are given out for mastery of their process ...
its a process just as much as the traditional ones ...

Couldn't agree more. Not worth getting one 's knickers in a knot over.:wink:
 

Philip Taylor

Member
Joined
Jul 27, 2006
Messages
33
Location
An Aussie in
Format
4x5 Format
Do you use a lens which has more contrast than others? You're manipulating reality. Do you choose a certain film for it's colour, tonality, sharpness? Yep, thought so.

They're all just tools, use the ones that appeal to your target audience. No one's wrong here.
 

blansky

Member
Joined
Nov 6, 2002
Messages
5,952
Location
Wine country, N. Cal.
Format
Medium Format
All photography, all paintings, all sculpture is manipulated reality.

Every time a person creates/or puts forth an art creation he is using it to reflect the world as he sees it or wants others to see it.

There is no such thing as reality.

There is only your reality and my reality and 8 billion other realities.

The fun/joy/emotion in seeing "art" is to experience other people's realities.

And seriously, thinking analog photography is somehow pure is just nonsense.
 

LiamG

Member
Joined
Dec 26, 2012
Messages
165
Location
Western Oregon
Format
Medium Format
And seriously, thinking analog photography is somehow pure is just nonsense.
Couldn't have said it better. What relationship exactly does this synthetic creation of a photograph have to the concept of reality; the connection is tenuous, possibly illusionary; we must not become the watchers in Plato's cave confusing images with reality.
 

batwister

Member
Joined
Sep 4, 2010
Messages
913
Location
Midlands, UK
Format
Medium Format
Nearly all colour film photographers today worth mentioning use Photoshop. That so few are in the Sony competition is just a sign that you need to look elsewhere for good work.
 
Joined
Mar 18, 2005
Messages
4,942
Location
Monroe, WA, USA
Format
Multi Format
There is no such thing as reality.

There is only your reality and my reality and 8 billion other realities.

Aye, blansky... I'd be willing to sit down over pizza and debate that one with ya'. I'd even pick up the tab. Unfortunately, however, that discussion would quickly veer far off-topic from the limited scope of this thread.

:cool:

Ken
 
Joined
Jul 1, 2008
Messages
5,462
Location
.
Format
Digital
Nearly all colour film photographers today worth mentioning use Photoshop. That so few are in the Sony competition is just a sign that you need to look elsewhere for good work.


True. And the number is growing and growing. I once considered PSP passé. Truth is the gallery-quality hybridised printing needs a step-one interface before gettign anywhere. We make use of it a little for colourimetrics (profiling) post-scan from film. The way to go is that everything on the film should be just right and correct — especially with transparency, exposure-wise or neg to essentially minimise the need for introducing artifice. Whether it reflects reality or imagination is a personal choice. Interpretations of reality differ greatly, but bad work is easily spotted. Darkroom manipulation of prints is on a par with working in Photoshop or any other image software. There is no difference. Just the moral ethos and dogma that bubble surface from the pond of purity.
 
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links.
To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here.

PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY:



Ilford ADOX Freestyle Photographic Stearman Press Weldon Color Lab Blue Moon Camera & Machine
Top Bottom