John Koehrer
Subscriber
Visualization=gee whiz, that would make a neat picture.
Don't need to read too much into it.
Don't need to read too much into it.
Digidurst said:Jorge, I really like the way your Convento de la Santa Cruz hallway turned out - your decision to make the light progressive in the image was an excellent one. Could you describe in more detail how you metered to achieve the end result? Thanks!
nsmith01tx said:So, at the risk of inviting anti-Ansel scorn, does anyone actually use the Zone VI B&W viewing filter that Fred Picker recommended (and sold BTW)?
I haven't seen or used one, seemed like it might be interesting to look at though.
Nathan
c6h6o3 said:I've got one lying around somewhere. You want it? That and his set of "fine reference prints" were the only things I ever bought from Zone VI which turned out to be absolutely useless.
jdef said:your inability to pre-visualize is a personal failing that might be remedied by some ritual, like viewing through a filter, but more likely is simply beyond your artistic potential.
Jay
Will S said:Does anyone know when Ansel Adams started using the term "previsualization"? I ran across a usage of this term by Edward Weston in 1936. I'm guessing he got it from Adams, but maybe it was the other way around? In either case, Weston doesn't seem to have any problems with it, and that is good enough for me...
Thanks,
Will
Bob F. said:I do not think you will find the word in any of Adams' books. He seems to have used "visualize" exclusively when I checked the indices some time back. "Previsualize" seems to be a Minor White creation.
Bob.
Will S said:Group F/64 was formed in '34 I think,
Will S said:Does anyone know when Ansel Adams started using the term "previsualization"? I ran across a usage of this term by Edward Weston in 1936. I'm guessing he got it from Adams, but maybe it was the other way around? In either case, Weston doesn't seem to have any problems with it, and that is good enough for me...
Thanks,
Will
In my day job (writing about industrial automation equipment), I very frequently encounter visualization systems, which turn things you normally could not see (electrical signals, process states, etc.) into visual form. The term "visualization" is also used in this way in photography, for example advertising photographers turn an art director's idea or concept into visual form. I therefore feel that there is ample justification for the term "pre-visualization" to mean seeing something in your mind's eye before you turn it into concrete form. It's one of those terms like "post-modern" - linguistically it may grate, but it's useful and so it's gained acceptance.jdef said:It seems that the English language already provides a word to describe the act of forming mental visual images, so why tack on a prefix?
Will S said:There is a quote from E.W. in the "Nudes" collection from a letter of his to A.A. dated 1936 in which he uses the term. Aperture started in 1952 and White was born in 1908, so I don't see how he could have invented it.
Group F/64 was formed in '34 I think, so it makes sense that someone invented the term around then.
Best,
Will
Donald Miller said:The first time that I remember Adams mentioning this was in regard to making his exposure on... Monolith The Face of Halfdome...As I recall he made two exposures that afternoon and then he had a vision of what he wanted the image to be and exposed his last glass plate with the red filter. I believe that exposure was made in 1927.
Since this vision occurred prior to making his pivotal exposure, I would assume that this would mean previsualization.
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