blockend
Member
You're not taking the OPs question seriously.Your response is a non sequitur.
My point is directed to the open minded reader. It doesn't matter whether you have Scheimpflug tattooed across your chest in gothic script, can swing and tilt in your sleep, and make an Ansel Adams print look like a Xerox, if you don't have a creative vision you may as well be playing patience. At the age of 18 I operated a 20 x 16 camera with a lens that stopped down to f256 for a day job. I was familiar with its operation inside a week and expert in a month. The subject matter was so banal that if I hadn't been listening to a radio I'd have probably gone mad. There was no magic in the contraption or uncommon skill in its output, even though it was superlative of its type and I was considered to have mastery of it. You could turn out more interesting shots with a Polaroid.
Henri Cartier-Bresson's work would maintain its presence in the photographic pantheon if he'd never developed a film or printed a shot in his life. He probably swapped lenses twice. Only a fool would consider he lacked technique.