- Joined
- Mar 30, 2005
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- 882
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1. Many, many, many years ago, I was in a discussion on photography which stuck with me. The leader of the discussion asked the rest of us to define the word "photograph." This was a simple matter, the rest of us quickly gave the standard definitions, from the technical/scientific to how the term is used in casual conversation. The leader then asked us to imagine we met someone who had never seen a photograph. He asked us to describe a photograph to someone who had never seen one. (For example, you visited Paris in 1840, saw a photograph and then went back to America and had to explain what a photograph was to your friends). In trying to describe a photograph, it quickly became evident that the definitions of photograph were of very little help.
I think we are in a similar position in this discussion. We can define tone and tonality. The definitions run the gamut from highly technical to more general, common usage. But, the definitions fall short when trying to describe.
2. When referring to tone in a photograph and how it works or doesn't work, why it is effective in one work and not another, we are a bit like wine tasters. We have to go outside scientific or technical language to other descriptors, metaphor, simile... The language is less precise, sometimes absurd, but in general, it works to describe. When my wife tells me a cabernet is "bold, has an hint of oak and a quiet finish," I have a pretty good idea how the wine will taste. Similarly, if she tells me she doesn't like my platinum print because it lacks tone and is flat and lifeless, I understand. Hopefully I can fix it in the next print.
I think we are in a similar position in this discussion. We can define tone and tonality. The definitions run the gamut from highly technical to more general, common usage. But, the definitions fall short when trying to describe.
2. When referring to tone in a photograph and how it works or doesn't work, why it is effective in one work and not another, we are a bit like wine tasters. We have to go outside scientific or technical language to other descriptors, metaphor, simile... The language is less precise, sometimes absurd, but in general, it works to describe. When my wife tells me a cabernet is "bold, has an hint of oak and a quiet finish," I have a pretty good idea how the wine will taste. Similarly, if she tells me she doesn't like my platinum print because it lacks tone and is flat and lifeless, I understand. Hopefully I can fix it in the next print.
) in that house are bricks. All we see in an image are variations in tone (and colour, if it's a colour image). That's in all images: it's how light and visibility works.