mastaliu
Member
now that I have a bronica rf645.....lots!
tapesonthefloor
Well-known
My wife, however (when she takes photographs) is the opposite. She's much more into verticals.
Must... hold... tongue...
gekopaca
French photographer
I try to avoid vertical shots, because almost all the current systems of diffusion and sharing are horizontal.
I guess I shoot less than 25% of my pictures in vertical, but after the editing it represents around 25 to 30% of my choice, because a lot of these are intersting pictures.
PS : I always use 3:2 ratio (my film legacy).
I guess I shoot less than 25% of my pictures in vertical, but after the editing it represents around 25 to 30% of my choice, because a lot of these are intersting pictures.
PS : I always use 3:2 ratio (my film legacy).
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segedi
RFicianado
If I had to guess...
35mm Rangefinder: 5%
35mm DSLR: 30%
Bronica RF645: 95%
I find it less intuitive to focus with the 35mm rangefinder and even vertical shots are usually focused horizontally and then I flip the camera to vertical. The Bronica RF645 makes shooting verticals very easy : )
35mm Rangefinder: 5%
35mm DSLR: 30%
Bronica RF645: 95%
I find it less intuitive to focus with the 35mm rangefinder and even vertical shots are usually focused horizontally and then I flip the camera to vertical. The Bronica RF645 makes shooting verticals very easy : )
JayM
Well-known
I recently asked myself this question again.
For almost the first year that I took photographs I always seemed to be doing vertical shots: it just seemed more natural. In the last few months I rarely make or select vertical shots. Partially because of the reason gekopaca mentioned, but also because they stopped looking right to me. Looking back over the past year or so I definitely love some of the verticals I shot, but many of them just feel awkward now. When creating a sequence of images these frustrate me because the content could fit in the series but I just had to turn the damn camera
I guess they must just be kept separate until I come up with a solution that I like...
For almost the first year that I took photographs I always seemed to be doing vertical shots: it just seemed more natural. In the last few months I rarely make or select vertical shots. Partially because of the reason gekopaca mentioned, but also because they stopped looking right to me. Looking back over the past year or so I definitely love some of the verticals I shot, but many of them just feel awkward now. When creating a sequence of images these frustrate me because the content could fit in the series but I just had to turn the damn camera
I guess they must just be kept separate until I come up with a solution that I like...
reagan
hey, they're only Zorkis
1-2% . . . maybe. I prefer wide-angle over tall-angle. Guess its just the way I've trained my brain to compose. I rarely even check to see if vertical would be interesting.
cantal
Newbie
Vertical at the beginning
Vertical at the beginning
Great format photography is mostly a vertical frame : look Atget, Adam Ansels, view cameras, etc.
So, horizontal or landscape frame has been made modern with the invention of the 35 mm camera.
Vertical at the beginning
Great format photography is mostly a vertical frame : look Atget, Adam Ansels, view cameras, etc.
So, horizontal or landscape frame has been made modern with the invention of the 35 mm camera.
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