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- Jun 23, 2005
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So this morning on the way into Ulpan class I saw a picture in Apple News from the Indiana Football game over the weekend that got me wondering if I was alone in my observation/thought. The picture was an amazing shot by Carmen Mandato / Getty of #15 midair with the ball. There is so much that goes into capturing a shot like this, lens selection, field position, understanding the flow of the game, be it luck, skill, or a combination of both Carmen knocked it out of the park with this one.
Way back when 4x5 SLRs ruled the house that the Babe build, Wrigley Field, Camden Yard, places where you would find the likes of the Green Monster (Fenway Park) and ball players who would become household names. Then 35mm cameras started to replace the behemoths, shorter time to the next frame, eventually motor drives, some as fast as seven frames per second and sharper faster and longer lenses. DSLRs replaced the analog cameras with buffers and memory cards allowing for even faster capture of images dozens per second. Now Mirrorless cameras with ultra-fast buffers, ever improving autofocus are starting to replace DSLRs.
These capabilities and more has increased the diversity of subjects and quality of many nature photographers professional and amateur alike. Rather than review a role of 36, now you may be editing hundred of images of the same moment in time be it an Osprey, a Gymnast, or a three year old. The ever improving imaging technology has allowed more people to take what some might say are better pictures. Does the removal of this barrier to entry make being a professional photographer make harder for seasoned professionals to stand out in what appears to be shrinking markets?
Have I become a curmudgeon like the ones who used to lament 4x5 film packs becoming harder to get? It’s wonderful for those of us for whom photography is a hobby, but is it just another deathblow for professional in several categories? Having arm wrestled with earning a living with photography decades ago, I look at it now and wonder about the impact of computing technology spilling over into photography has had.
Thoughts?
B2 (;->
Way back when 4x5 SLRs ruled the house that the Babe build, Wrigley Field, Camden Yard, places where you would find the likes of the Green Monster (Fenway Park) and ball players who would become household names. Then 35mm cameras started to replace the behemoths, shorter time to the next frame, eventually motor drives, some as fast as seven frames per second and sharper faster and longer lenses. DSLRs replaced the analog cameras with buffers and memory cards allowing for even faster capture of images dozens per second. Now Mirrorless cameras with ultra-fast buffers, ever improving autofocus are starting to replace DSLRs.
These capabilities and more has increased the diversity of subjects and quality of many nature photographers professional and amateur alike. Rather than review a role of 36, now you may be editing hundred of images of the same moment in time be it an Osprey, a Gymnast, or a three year old. The ever improving imaging technology has allowed more people to take what some might say are better pictures. Does the removal of this barrier to entry make being a professional photographer make harder for seasoned professionals to stand out in what appears to be shrinking markets?
Have I become a curmudgeon like the ones who used to lament 4x5 film packs becoming harder to get? It’s wonderful for those of us for whom photography is a hobby, but is it just another deathblow for professional in several categories? Having arm wrestled with earning a living with photography decades ago, I look at it now and wonder about the impact of computing technology spilling over into photography has had.
Thoughts?
B2 (;->
