Sirius Glass
Subscriber
I have never been a fan of over saturated photographs or photographs with digital artifacts. Nor have I ever been a fan of cheap cameras that are designed to have vignetting and light leaks.
We are all inundated with over saturated and HDR photography now but all this is, is the photographer attempting to make the shots surreal. Most people don't want their pictures to represent "reality" but instead a hyper reality or a dream reality. We can bemoan this trend but almost all acclaimed black and white photography is also tarted up to do the same thing.
Ansel Adams photography was not what was there but was his vision of what the scene could be. All you have to do is look at his darkroom work to see that the over dramatization of the scene was his goal.
Look at some of the black and white on this site and you'll find the same thing. Surrealism of a scene.
When I look through the viewfinder I don't go, "oh this look nice", I go " lets see, I'll darken the sky, make the clouds more contrasty, burn in here, dodge here" etc etc.
Even color photographers of the past tarted up the saturation and "impact" of the shot.
So what we are seeing a lot of now, is not new. We are just seeing more of it because there are more photographers out there.
I just zone the cr*p out nowadays. Still amazing that exemplars of modern photography resemble the pictures of 1975, '85, '95, 05. Give or take a little HDR.Would you like the 'phone number for Dignitas?
Well, duhh! We live in Southern California, remember?the undeservedly over praised besottedly canonized Kodachrome specialized in muddy and soot be-smudged skies.
the undeservedly over praised besottedly canonized Kodachrome specialized in muddy and soot be-smudged skies.
Well, duhh! We live in Southern California, remember?![]()
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: ![]() |