Chan Tran
Subscriber
For your image and what you did to it is fine by me but I don't know how to define what's OK what's not. If for example you removed the light post it would be not OK to me.
For your image and what you did to it is fine by me but I don't know how to define what's OK what's not. If for example you removed the light post it would be not OK to me.
While I think that the majority of responses has been thoughtful, I'd like to acknowledge in particular (but no particular order, and also without discrediting the others) those of @loccdor, @Vaughn, @albireo, @fgorga and @Brendan Quirk. Those are the kind of thoughts I was looking for - and note they're not necessarily in agreement with each other. That's fine! Again, this is not to say I found the other posts less valuable; the ones I mentioned just stood out.
We all have our personal preferences, but if the intention is art, there shouldn't be any rules.
Short answer: If I see something that looks like it needs to be fixed, then I fix it, of course (whenever practical).If you come home with a shot that in hindsight you feel benefits from aligned verticals, but alas, it's not in the RAW/negative, do you fix it, or do you consider it a case for @Alan Edward Klein's cylindrical eternal archive?
You would never know that he removed it unless he told you though, just as the viewer wouldn't know if he manually added the light post to balance the image.![]()
Oh, definitely and very explicitly NOT the latter. Thanks for asking so I can clarify that. This is really out of personal interest in how people feel about it. Given that I have been thinking about this for years, really, I thought I might put the question out there and see how others have been navigating this territory. In my mind, this is one of these things that have many perspectives, with all of them having some good arguments to support them. And it's also not something I think a group of photographers or photography enthusiasts will ever reach consensus on. So that's also not the aim of this thread; I assume that we partly agree, partly disagree and that it's going to stay that way. Which is fine; exchanging views is still interesting for its own sake. So that's what this is about; nothing more.Out of curiosity, can I ask if your thread and poll were begun out of sheer interest in our views or might there be a larger objective which may or may not affect the rules that will apply on picture submissions on Photrio
You need to practise shadow puppets. Rabbits and birds and dinosaurs.![]()
Surely this is a non answerable question.
If I look at my own photos, I think they're technically better if I work on them. And yet, I feel like I also loose something in terms of directness; it feels like I'm kind of breaking (or at least kinking) the chain that links the original scene to the final image. Is that a problem? I don't know. I like it if it doesn't happen, but does it really hurt if it does?
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So in a way the editing already begins way before we finally see the result...
Thanks for sharing your extensive thoughts. It is really a matter we all think of and somehow I believe we all wish we could intervene to a photo as little as we can.
But when you say "breaking the chain" isn't that already happening when we choose a camera, a format, a lens, a frame with the viewfinder, a film?
We already "alter" the reality with very definite choices that will change the cropped reality, the depth of field, the exposure, etc.
So in a way the editing already begins way before we finally see the result...
somehow I believe we all wish we could intervene to a photo as little as we can.
Arguably, yes. So perhaps we start out with an assumption that the chain needs to be broken in some way if we want to get started in the first place. While on that basis I think there's merit to your argument, at the same time it also illustrates how quickly our thoughts can spiral into tautological meaninglessness. When I mention the 'chain', I mean the links in the process that lead from an original scene and end up with the image as presented/consumed. If we take the position that the chain is broken as soon as we start building it...well, what meaning is left, at all?But when you say "breaking the chain" isn't that already happening when we choose a camera, a format, a lens, a frame with the viewfinder, a film?
The bit I'd like to highlight is that first bit, about the 'recollection'. That refers IMO to one of those very fundamental motivations we have for creating images. Recollection might be such a motive, but it's not the only possibility. Even if it's recollection - recollection of what? The scene as we literally saw it? Or the place as we experienced it? We're getting close to Minor White's 'equivalence' now - perhaps the scene is just a proxy for the experience and the photo an indirect way of conveying an unspeakable feeling to a viewer. A different way of 'recollecting' than a typical family album, which is after all also very much about recollecting. If it's about, let's say, 'emotional recollection', I guess it all of a sudden becomes more plausible that interventions like toning and vignetting are fair game. They may not be if we want to literally recollect the visual nature of the situation as it manifested itself, as objectively as possible. Different motivations, different choices. Those who said that "it depends on what you're after" are of course right. Although perhaps there's a difference between "what we're after" and "what we set out to do". The former is looking at things from the backside, the latter starts at the front.this recollection of a particular scene I'm seeking to obtain, might happen if I nail the bit of the workflow that happens before the image hits the screen, but it almost never happens when I seek to obtain it by resorting to extensive layers of vignetting, sepia toning, hard contrasts, removing or adding bits, etc.
^ This, but...Each instance is unique and “rules” are meaningless. Except “whatever it takes to achieve personal satisfaction and happiness.”
Maybe consider two sets of rules, one for film and one for digital? Try sticking with the limited processing rule for your film work, but allow yourself more extensive editing choices when shooting digital?Over the past few years I've done mostly pretty straight shooting: The negative gets printed, maybe with a little burning here and there, but not a whole lot of actual manipulation. As I said, there's an aspect of integrity, or directness to it. Lately, I've been shooting more digital again, mostly because I was bumping into technical limitations of what I felt I could do with film, and of course digital capture is just an open invitation to more extensive editing. So that's what I've been doing a little more of, and I really like what it does, image-wise.
Are you sure?I'm not trying to solve a problem...
... it sounds to me like someone who is trying to work through something -- maybe not quite an existential crisis, but some kind of problem? Of course, I could easily be wrong. Wouldn't be the first time.On the one hand, I'm of the persuasion that an image is best capture right on the spot with as little further processing necessary to bring out what the image means to convey. [...]
On the other hand, I disagree with all that and I honestly believe that whatever it takes, is justified in constructing the image. [...]
So there's these two forces pulling me in opposite directions...
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