I never tell anyone whether I crop or not.
If you don't know, do you wonder whether it's been cropped or not?
I guess I see it a little differently, when the rule is self imposed it creates challenge. Challenge spurs problem solving and creativity. Like my previous comment about the Haiku form, I find finding solutions within a structural constraint can be rewarding. There are a whole set of choices being made, not only framing but monochrome, film type, lens all create limits and all contain possible options.
Not saying you're wrong. I'm in the camp of 'who cares about cropping'. It just doesn't bear any significance at all in how I appreciate a photograph. Therefore I'm curious to know: Are you interested in having a good time with photography, or are you interested in making the best photographs you can make? (Or both, perhaps?)
My thought has always been: If you make photography about an idea other than the photographs you make, you might find yourself improving your personal relationship to photography more than the photographs themselves. And there is absolutely nothing wrong with that.
I find that photography is a very mental type of exercise, where different photographers work in different ways. I work a lot with emotion and mood in my photographs, and seldom have much time to compose full frame in the viewfinder. Something appears that inspires me, I try to photograph it, and move on.
In addition I have a problem with my vision where it's impossible for me to see when lines are straight across the composition, and the rotation of the negative in the enlarger inevitably means cropping. I cannot learn to shoot full frame, unless I'm on a tripod and I can use a level to straighten the camera, so my opinion might come from my inability.
I never tell anyone whether I crop or not.
If you don't know, do you wonder whether it's been cropped or not?
Not saying you should shoot full frame Thomas (we're on the same page on that, I think) but would a gridded focusing screen help?
I suspect something in my LX's prism-to-body because I seem to get tilted horizontals out of it far more often than my other cameras...or is it how I hold it? Or my imagination? I'm just not sure, but I've been tempted to send it for a CLA and check of that just for peace of mind.
Put a bi-level spirit level in the hot shoe. If everything is level and the camera still shows things out of whack, then you should consider a service.
Grid focusing screens are excellent, but generally only for 100% viewfinder coverage.
You're right of course. It's easy enough to check.
I do find the grid in my Yashicamat 124 to be useful. It's really easy to get a TLR with a WLF into a tilted hold if you aren't mindful of it.
I never tell anyone whether I crop or not.
If you don't know, do you wonder whether it's been cropped or not?
And that would be a bad thing?
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