Berkeley Mike
Member
I see where we are stumbling. Who said I had to frame with a mechanically predetermined ratio of a particular camera when I produce a final image?
True, but if the question is whether or not to attempt to compose and crop in camera when one can, the question makes more sense.
It would be hard to find a competitor that could go lower.
The world is not formatted. Different cameras are formatted differently. Restricting capture exactly to the format of the camera at hand is an arbitrary restriction of vision..
Why is it silly not to shoot? My goodness...I decide not to shoot far more images than I do shoot. One choses one image over another for many many reasons. And one reason could easily be that a square image in a portfolio of rectangular images would often be jarring to the whole. Another would be if one's portfolio of images all are shown with the film's rebate as an essential part of the image -- cropping would be a discord in the portfolio.If what I see is square and I have a 35mm camera in hand, do I just refuse to shoot? That is just silly. Vaughn,...
of course;crop- whenever it helps the image;I have even cropped while mounting; you are the artist; you are in control of it!Well if you are not able to move or crop in camera as you want. Then it is a limit if circumstances that you can fix in the copy. Nothing wrong with that, you fix other limits, such as burning/dodging/contrast/tonings etc.
Cropping in the darkroom is perfectly fine. Don't be hard on yourself.
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Yes I can understand what you feel. But let me short state : I am against cropping in general. It is the all time debate of squere formats (6 x 6). I remember also Hasselblad stated (within marketing campaign) : If you make a picture as Portrait/Landdcape is a decision you will find later.As I have noticed another post on the gallery suggesting I should crop - kids Rome, I thought it worthy of a new post. When framing with a rangefinder, perhaps you see something below the brightline finders you wish to exclude, in preference to excluding part of the image at the top. In this case, if what appears at the top is not helping the content or composition, then perhaps the solution (as suggested) is to crop at the printing stage. However, (I feel) this destroys your moment of realisation within the frame finders. Do some understand what I am trying to say?
I think you misunderstood me. You don't want to just blindly shoot wide and then try to fix it at home. You still set up your shot like you always do and get the shot the way you want it. The only difference is you back up or zoom out a tad to give you some extra room. You certainly don't want to change the angle or direction. And you're not wanting to crop a large portion of the photo out (in most cases). You're just giving yourself a little extra breathing room. It's not a fix for bad composition in the field. It's an insurance policy against missed opportunities.I find that if I shoot wide and hope to find a decent crop at home, I miss the best composition. I may assume it's there because I shot "everything". But it isn't. The problem is angle and direction and where things fit are what define a good composition. Maybe the situation called for you to move one foot to the right to get it. It's too late to do that at home. No amount of cropping will correct that error. However, if you shoot to crop in the camera, you pay more attention to angles, directions, and where things are fitting in relationship to each other. The final will be better. If you shoot to capture everything or wide and crop at home, you find the the printing crop just doesn't work well in many cases.
I am on the opposite side to you Ralph. Yes an artist is allowed to EVERYTHING at EVERYTIME.of course;crop- whenever it helps the image;I have even cropped while mounting; you are the artist; you are in control of it!
I work with several formats. Rollei square, 4x5, 5x7, 4x10, 8x10, 5x14, 11x14. Quite a choice, even if not cropping. What percentage of images does one 'lose' by restricting oneself to not cropping? Zero percent. The number of possible images in infinite, or close enough relative to our ability to understand such a number. Choose B&W over color and you lose half (for purposes of this example) the images possible to make. How many possible images are left -- an infinite amount.
The idea that one gains more possible images by cropping is not true...it just feels like it. The number is always infinte. Experience and imagination are some of the tools to use to help one see more possible images, not whether or not one crops.
Jim, Yes that I can agree with. You're composing the elements in the camera and leaving some room around the sides. That's why I think about how I intend to use the photo in the end. If I'm shooting a vacation slide show to be shown on 16:9 TV, I'll set the camera for 16:9. If I think I'll print, put on the internet, etc. than I'll set 4:3 which is the full size sensor in my camera, and compose to 4:3. I don;t leave some room on the edges. That's old habits from my 35mm slide shooting days.I think you misunderstood me. You don't want to just blindly shoot wide and then try to fix it at home. You still set up your shot like you always do and get the shot the way you want it. The only difference is you back up or zoom out a tad to give you some extra room. You certainly don't want to change the angle or direction. And you're not wanting to crop a large portion of the photo out (in most cases). You're just giving yourself a little extra breathing room. It's not a fix for bad composition in the field. It's an insurance policy against missed opportunities.
Now sometimes I'll see something in a print that makes me crop an image pretty hard. You don't rely on those, but they can be happy accidents. It's fun when you find a better picture within an already good picture that you didn't even notice existed. It's important to keep your mind open at all times. Often times I'll go shooting with an ideal shot already in mind. But I'll often take other shots on the way, just in case I find something even better.
No Jim sorry to state but what you described isn't my way also. It is like the workflow of so many today
who shot digital without care about anything (for example exposure ?????)
Because it can by done via post production.
A photograph isn't be able to be done via post production because the general Definition of a photograph is that is a creation during the moment of it is shot. What did Ansel Adams and H.C. Bresson teached us?
So a photograph isn't coming from post but from post is coming a lot of things!
with regards[/QUOTE
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Thank goodness you teach the proper use of tripods.Use of the word "post" will result in immediate death by being beaten with tripods
Printing a negative is post-production.No Jim sorry to state but what you described isn't my way also. It is like the workflow of so many today
who shot digital without care about anything (for example exposure ?????)
Because it can by done via post production.
A photograph isn't be able to be done via post production because the general Definition of a photograph is that is a creation during the moment of it is shot. What did Ansel Adams and H.C. Bresson teached us?
So a photograph isn't coming from post but from post is coming a lot of things!
with regards
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