Huss
Veteran
Exactly...the tall buildings shield the sun so much of the day and so much of the year in Manhattan.
Look at the pics. His subjects are in bright sunshine.
Exactly...the tall buildings shield the sun so much of the day and so much of the year in Manhattan.
Back to the example of tools, I like to think that a large part of (the amateur photography I engage in) is about emotions and time. Playing with the very different looks is part of the fun.
Reminds me that shooting slow chrome film is a good way to recalibrate one's perception. When I did a year of Kodachrome 64, TriX afterwards felt really fast!
I do understand when One wants a body of work to look, read the same.., tonal range, depth, shadow detail etc
But I just can’t get into too much formulation for my shooting/ developing ...
Blasphemy for what I am about to say... Let the trolls begin their ascent
Ansel Adams does absolutely Nothing for me
His developing, long range of greys and final product bore me
( though his sense of composition can make me curious)
Some people find his work Extraordinary and that’s ok , it’s a big World with lots of Eye Candy
Portra 160, and even Kodak Gold 100 or 200 are really like you say made for places like California, and for the few times I've been to the Med. I also shot my last roll of Kodachrome in Italy, Monaco, and south of France: bliss.
I have an Epson flatbed (4990 or the older one) that is OK but its scans don't compare to the tonality that one gets from a simple darkroom print. And much more boring to use
And then he was given assignment to photograph people instead of cheese landscapes he totally blow it.
Yes. Lazy photography which results in a uniform aesthetic among lazy photographers, which results in pictures that are uniformly mediocre and ugly. With a little practice judging distances you do not need f8 or f11, even with a 50mm lens, to get what you want in focus. I know people who can catch the fly with f/3.5 on their Rolleiflex. Practice.
What a strange thing to call lazy.
You might as well call people shooting wide open to use thin depth of field to hide boring compositions lazy.
Use wide depth of field to pack the frame, narrow depth of field to isolate the subject. Neither are lazy or need 'skill'. 🙄
I guess I am really, really, really lazy. 🙂
I use digital with auto ISO, auto shutter speed and aperture priority.
I'm staggered you managed to post even that number of words!
Probably lots of reasons for that John but probably the most prominent one I guess would be fashion .
Punchy contrast images which have instant impact .
I see this time and time again at my local photography society .
Judges are always telling people that shots need impact …. the wow factor .
Few take time to study a print and appreciate the tonality .
It`s all fast food , if it doesn`t grab you immediately its gone .
Every things fast on the eye it seems.
There are interesting different opinions in this thread, which is good and is part of the strength of this forum where different opinions can live together.
Back to the original question I think one of the most important point has been made by Michael Markey specially in his last sentences which I highlighted and I agree with.
In my case I try to adapt my style to the feeling I want to commmunicate, sometimes I need a rough image, with much grain and contrast and other times I find better a smooth scale of tones.
There is no one single recipe for everything, just my opinion.
Thank you for chiming in, Robert. Sad to say, I think the majority of photographers of my generation (30s) and younger have never even seen (in person) a large print with nuanced and graded tonality. These are in the homes of artists and in galleries and museums. The imagery which is forced upon people (to make them more obedient consumers) is not intended to generate thought or feeling but cheap emotions.
That`s a good point .
There just isn`t enough of it about or enough people making that type of picture for styles like that to become familiar .
I mentioned before ,at my camera club there are one or two master printers . They`ve done commercial darkroom work for clients and written tutorials . None of them do that now .So that "loss" of expertise has had a profound effect on the up coming generations of photographers .
I take the view that of all the things photographic I have done, it was the best money I ever spent learning to expose, develop and print.
Look at the pics. His subjects are in bright sunshine.
Many street photographers will compensate for this sudden change by pushing the entire roll in order to keep their shutter speed high and go to f/8 instead of f/3.5 in the shadowy areas.
I say that's lazy.