NedL
Subscriber
There might be a good MSA for it right now too...
If it turns out to be worth it, I will have to crop.
...

There might be a good MSA for it right now too...
If it turns out to be worth it, I will have to crop.
...
If you need to crop, don't you need more practice in camera framing?
So which camera offers me Golden Ratio negatives? Cropping is essential if you want aesthetically pleasing prints.If you need to crop, don't you need more practice in camera framing? Or do you need to use a different format ratio suited to what you are trying to achieve?
...Outside of HCB's portfolio, I'll bet 99% of all the great prints you have seen were cropped, straightened or otherwise manipulated in some way.
PS - I've always enjoyed your work Clive, but have just revisited your APUG gallery, and I'm enjoying your pictures all over again.
If you need to crop, don't you need more practice in camera framing? Or do you need to use a different format ratio suited to what you are trying to achieve?
Another reason I crop is that after inspecting the negative I realise something was happening in the periphery that I didn't notice in the viewfinder (tourist staring dead-eyed at your Rollei, dog cocking it's leg against a bin...). It may have been because it was a quickly taken shot with no time to check everything, or because the viewfinder simply doesn't cover 100% of the negative. It's about 90% on my Pentax 6x7. So it's crop it or waste what could be a great print. Why not? Outside of HCB's portfolio, I'll bet 99% of all the great prints you have seen were cropped, straightened or otherwise manipulated in some way.
... tree branch growing out of someone's ear, or a tree or telephone pole rising out of a head ...
All the more reason to shoot MF with a camera that has a large clear and bright viewfinders so that one can avoid those things before the photograph is taken.
Some posts have mentioned HCB and I think it is quite ironic that probably his most iconic image, that of the puddle jumper is cropped, but if you listen to him describing how he made this image to a BBC reporter in London at the time of one of his exhibitions he expresses this lost integrity through body language and exclamation.
The "integrity" lost though, is purely artificial. It's an intellectual argument rather than a practical one. The picture is great regardless of how he got there.
If HCB had used a longer lens to crop the content instead (resulting in the same scene being printed) would that somehow have fixed the integrity issue?
IMO, cropping with the camera lens is fully equivalent to cropping with the enlarger. With regard to grain and resolution that's another thing, a small thing.
So if cropping at the enlarger is somehow a "lesser" version of your art - then isn't split-grade printing? Dodging and burning? Toning?
Taking a photo is an art, as is deciding on the development that gives you the neg that's your interpretation, as is the whole printing process. Why toss out one more tool?
I've had shots cropped in-camera just fine, but then I've played with further cropping and found a powerful change in how the image feels to me. I've taken shots I loved and noticed later a power line cutting one corner (especially with camera without 100% VF coverage). Sometimes the time you have to get the shot doesn't allow a chin-rubbing moment of reflection and analysis - you can do that all day in the darkroom.
The moment you snap the photo you've made a creative decision. The idea that you can re-interpret that decision with layers of new decisions is a lovely thing to my mind.
It's all cute and curmudgeonly to suggest that someone who crops while printing is somehow lazy, has lesser talent, whatever - but it's also kind of insulting and myopic and suggests a very limited view of a limitless craft.
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