Ororaro
Well-known
I agree, some people are short of terms and have began to use (IMO) stupid terms such as "drawing" and "painting".
And indeed all languages. It's always worth fighting a rearguard action against distinctions that are lost by 'simplifying' spelling (e.g. kerb/curb) or against sheer illiteracy, but language does evolve and you need to keep an eye open for useful new ways of saying things.Bryce said:Funny thing about the English language, it just keeps growing; when a new word is needed, it either gets borrowed from another language or an old word gets a new meaning.
NB23 said:I agree, some people are short of terms and have began to use (IMO) stupid terms such as "drawing" and "painting".
M. Valdemar said:Also from Camera Quest:
50/2 Leitz Summar (1933-1940): Universally disparaged, I think it's a treasure. These lenses give a wonderful semi-soft focus effect when shot at wide apertures with color film. Very beautiful, great for scenics, women, nudes, romantic images. All chrome collapsible lenses. Watch out for fogging and cleaning scratches. All left the factory without coating, though some were sent back to the factory for coating post war.
http://www.cameraquest.com/ltmlens.htm
Smear a tiny bit of vaseline on the front element of your sharp lens, like the 50mm f2 Nikkor, and voila, romantic images.
Or monkey around 30 seconds in Photoshop. Alien Skin's "Exposure II" is wonderful.
Whether you use lens aberrations/defects or software algorithms to create the pictorial effect you're after, you're still using a technical gadget to create a desired record of something that was in front of you on a photo sensitive material.
Now if you want to get into the philosophy that photos are actually stopping time by recording their collision with alterable matter to make a "photograph", I'm game to discuss it.
Drawing, painting, etching, etc etc. I guess they're accurate in the sense that a wine critic will describe old grape juice as "nutty", "hints of vanilla and jasmine", "a firm nose" and so forth. Whatever floats your boat. I think "nutty" is a good all around term to describe self-induced perceptions.
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ALL visual perceptions of three-dimensionality are imaginary, in that they are a construction of the brain, not a reality. A '3D effect' is not however imaginary: the word 'effect' is the key, viz., an image that looks 3D, without necessarily being so.M. Valdemar said:PS: "3D" effects in photographs are imaginary. You can perceive whatever you want, but what you see is not "3D".
we share the same view....😀mfogiel said:The lenses which exhibit this the most are from Zeiss.
So 3D comes from contrast, sharpness, lack of flare, deep shadows, no blown highlights, graduated lighting?