I don't know, it's not worth pursuing, I'm just glad you didn't say........"pre-visualizing".
Sometimes I’m in a Minor White mood, and sometimes Ansel Adams is my go to!
I don't know, it's not worth pursuing, I'm just glad you didn't say........"pre-visualizing".
These types of threads always make me chuckle. I am not just picking on photography, people of all Jobs/Hobbies seem to fall prey to embellishment.No. No one "builds" photos. There's just no comparison between building and photographing. Building is genuinely complex and tends to involve many different people with completely different skills.
Maybe building in a way similar to making something out of Lego....
So I guess hunting. fishing and gathering wouldn't fly with you eitherNo. No one "builds" photos. There's just no comparison between building and photographing. Building is genuinely complex and tends to involve many different people with completely different skills.
So I guess hunting. fishing and gathering wouldn't fly with you either![]()
For ages I've been using the term "snapping". This has elicited responses such as "you don't 'snap' a large format photograph, Marc!", but that only makes me want to use the phrase more - it seems friendly, embedded in photographic social vernacular but possibly without pretension - I really want everyone to be as enthused about photography as I am (well, maybe not 'that' enthused), and enjoy what I do and feel a part of it too. Making and taking and creating seem too individual to me, when the subject/camera & film manufacturers/weather/chance all always play such a significant part in the snap as well...
Marc!
I agree. It's pretentious to say, "I'm going out to make (or build) photographs.".......................
Snapping is for snapshots not photographs. I personally eschew using pretentious terms like making photographs.
Snapping is for snapshots not photographs. I personally eschew using pretentious terms like making photographs.
Sounds like you eschew unpretentious terms also.
I sometimes use the term "snapping pictures" when people ask what I'm doing as it tends to get rid of them fast. Seems like they immediately dismiss me as a casual, harmless, nobody rather than a photographer. Shortens the conversation so I can get on with making photographs.
The question you pose in the OP seems plain enough to me, and you did say that you don't see it as a binary choice. To my way of thinking, it depends how much of the creativity happens post-capture (oh hell, there's another word, although I see @jeffreyg has already used it). Some photographers have seen the capture as the creative bit, and the darkroom stuff as a dull craft which they may even assign to others. Other photographers make magic in the darkroom out of quite pedestrian negatives, which may not even be their own. I like to see both ways.Linguistic terminology is a problem on APUG, particularly between American and English. Some months ago, I posted a thread about being photogenic and it seems in the USA it means being beautiful, but in the UK, it refers to looking good in photographs. My OP is obviously doomed to misunderstanding, as pointed out by Don_ih.
Linguistic terminology is a problem on APUG, particularly between American and English. Some months ago, I posted a thread about being photogenic and it seems in the USA it means being beautiful, but in the UK, it refers to looking good in photographs. My OP is obviously doomed to misunderstanding, as pointed out by Don_ih.
Not my kids...or at least they would think I'm being no more weird than usual. Do you really think you are 'normal'?Does anyone actually say to their family, "I'm going out to build (make) some pictures?" Who talks like that? Don't you just say, "I'm going out to shoot (or take) some pictures?" I mean, you can still think you're going out to "build" them. But if you use that word, your kids are going to think you're kind of weird.
Hard to get away with "Just snapping pictures" when using a classy-looking 100+ year old 5x7. They won't believe you. There is a point where feigned modesty starts to sound a bit pretentious.![]()
Try it; you'll likely be surprised.
The opposite, I suppose, is when someone looks at our camera gear and assumes that we are professional because "it looks expensive". The last time that happened I explained that the equiment I was using hasn't been used professionally for 40 years. That gets rid of busybodies too, except those who feign that they know what they are talking about.
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