bmattock
Veteran
Fancy someone giving Al Kaplan a digital camera to shoot ... might as well give a fish a bicycle! :angel:
More like handing Maxwell a silver hammer and bending down so he can get a good aim.
Fancy someone giving Al Kaplan a digital camera to shoot ... might as well give a fish a bicycle! :angel:
More keepers just clutter up the selection process. That includes both while you're back at home staring at your computer screen and the biggest enemy of getting great pictures: staring at the back of your camera, checking every frame, constantly monitoring exposure and data. Wasting time. Missing pictures. Keepers are NOT the goal. Real eye grabbers might be goal, or images that appeal to your emotions, but going for raw number of keepers is striving for mediocrity.
http://thepriceofsilver.blogspot.com
I do not shoot film at all anymore but will say that the recent "all digital" Gulf Coast Wildlife Photography Contest, I took 10,562 images with my Canon EOS system during the 135-day contest. I submitted 120 images. More than 5,000 images were submitted from 80 selected photographers. Of the 120 I submitted, 9 placed in the contest including two first places. I also got second place overall in the invertebrates division. I won $1,600 that will go toward a future M9 purchase if the M9 turns out to be as problem-free as it appears. ( I am not a full time shooter anymore, and have a day job, so no lectures on how little money that is from such a long contest. :^)
My "turn in ratio" of 120 to 10,562 total images shot (and I heavily crop in camera during lulls in the action) is 0.011 or 1.1%. My "photographs that placed" ratio (judged in the top 5 in 25 different categories) against total photo captures turns out to be .000852, or 0.085%.
Had I been shooting my old standby of K64, that would have amounted to 293 rolls of film at an estimated cost of $15 per roll (purchase and processing) totalling a bit more than $4,400. I would only have lost about $3,200 shooting film ;^)
God bless digital with all its faults and advantages....
That's a really succinct way to put it. I feel much the same.Keepers...about the same per subject.
With digital, I get many more good shots on the same subject, but they are repetative, providing 4 similar views where only 1 is needed/wanted.
So, subtracting the redundancies, it's all about the same.
If you were concerned about $4,400 you would have done a better job of parsing your index finger's thrusts against the shutter release button. There seems to be a general agreement here that shooting more exposures translates into rapidly diminishing returns. To put a price tag on "money saved" is meaningless in that situation.
If I ever had to cull through 10,562 images I'd probably exchange my 35mm for my 9mm and shoot one final "self portrait".
The train photo is AWESOME Bill!Here's something funny...
Some of the photos which I currently feel are among the best I've ever taken were both taken with a digital SLR, but with manual focus lenses.
I generally use my dSLR like I did my film SLR - I have AE and AF and use it if the cause be just, but I also use full manual control when I wish to exert my own level of control on the photos I take. I've never thought of myself as being controlled by my camera or that my camera dictated me using it a particular way. It has manual control, and I use it when it seems appropriate to me. I do tend to take more shots, yes. I see that as an advantage.
I also find that I'm more willing to experiment with digital, since I can generally quickly find out if I'm on the wrong track and correct myself, thanks to the magic of the LCD review (chimping) and histogram, etc. It's cheap to experiment with digital - and you get instant results - what's not to like?
These are some of my favorites, all digital with manual focus lenses.
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The train photo is AWESOME Bill!
I also really like the dancers. The motion of the lady contrast well with the stillness of her partner.
If you were concerned about $4,400 you would have done a better job of parsing your index finger's thrusts against the shutter release button. There seems to be a general agreement here that shooting more exposures translates into rapidly diminishing returns. To put a price tag on "money saved" is meaningless in that situation.
If I ever had to cull through 10,562 images I'd probably exchange my 35mm for my 9mm and shoot one final "self portrait".