typhillips
Established
Whoaaahhhh boy.... hold on there, Finder.
Sorry if my comment came across the wrong way. It wasn't meant to disparage anyone. And I was by no means dissing Leica - I own several Leicas and they are by far my favorite cameras to shoot with.
What I was referring to is the fact that traditional documentary photography (which pretty much means Leica if you go back more than 40 years or so) is unfortunately saddled with "rules", many of which seem ridiculous, IMHO. One of these is that shooting full frame is the only way to go and that if you crop a photo you are somehow ruining the magnificence of the "golden" aspect ratio. I don't have any problem with people who only shoot full frame, but when they criticize others' photos solely because they are cropped, I get irritated.
If you look at great paintings throughout the history of art, you will see many different aspect ratios. Why should photography be any different?
Aspect ratios aside, why is cropping on the darkroom easel (or digital darkroom) any different than cropping in the viewfinder? Nobody has yet provided me any compelling argument for this.
So in summary, I'm not criticizing anyone's personal aesthetic and I'm certainly not criticizing Leica. I apologize if anyone was offended.
Sorry if my comment came across the wrong way. It wasn't meant to disparage anyone. And I was by no means dissing Leica - I own several Leicas and they are by far my favorite cameras to shoot with.
What I was referring to is the fact that traditional documentary photography (which pretty much means Leica if you go back more than 40 years or so) is unfortunately saddled with "rules", many of which seem ridiculous, IMHO. One of these is that shooting full frame is the only way to go and that if you crop a photo you are somehow ruining the magnificence of the "golden" aspect ratio. I don't have any problem with people who only shoot full frame, but when they criticize others' photos solely because they are cropped, I get irritated.
If you look at great paintings throughout the history of art, you will see many different aspect ratios. Why should photography be any different?
Aspect ratios aside, why is cropping on the darkroom easel (or digital darkroom) any different than cropping in the viewfinder? Nobody has yet provided me any compelling argument for this.
So in summary, I'm not criticizing anyone's personal aesthetic and I'm certainly not criticizing Leica. I apologize if anyone was offended.