hans voralberg
Veteran
As long as I can see what's going on, or make and educated guess on an A4 print then well it's sharp enough. I agree that composition and tonality is more important
varjag said:Is your photography class mandatory?
StuartR said:...As for the 4x5 80 inch party photos...it sounds like a wonderfully surrealist venture. Glorifying the banal party photos that we always see. Of course, he probably did not mean for them to be that way, but who knows.
Gabriel M.A. said:I like your teacher already.
varjag said:Wait.. it's not the same teacher who printed wall-sized party snaps?
M. Valdemar said:
otaku said:Personally sharpness isn't just over rated but generally I find it less appealing in most cases such as with digital to me it just seems less life like
sjw617 said:Could you explain this a bit more for me? I do not understand this at all. How can sharpness be over rated? For me blurry out of focus shots generally (95%+) get tossed immediately.
Steve
Michael P. said:Donald, I know what you mean. I used to work at a camera store whose manager valued sharpness above all else. In her mind only the most expensive lenses and finest grain film were worth using at all, and ISO 50 was always better than 100, etc. How people get that idea in their heads is beyond me.
sjw617 said:Gabriel,
I am guessing that you meant to take the first picture - chose the f stop and figured that it would turn out at least somewhat like it dd. If I put film on the light box and saw that image first, I would be very nervous. I would assume I screwed up and would be worried about the rest of the roll. Since I shoot mainly f22, I assume tack sharp images will appear on the light box. Yes, I would have thrown out that image.
I still do not understand how sharpness is " less appealing in most cases such as with digital to me it just seems less life like ". Sharpness is less lifelike? less appealing? I find short depth of field that isolates an object generally very distracting. As an effect it can be usefull but as a shooting style I do not understand it.
sjw617 said:Gabriel,
I am guessing that you meant to take the first picture - chose the f stop and figured that it would turn out at least somewhat like it dd. If I put film on the light box and saw that image first, I would be very nervous. I would assume I screwed up and would be worried about the rest of the roll. Since I shoot mainly f22, I assume tack sharp images will appear on the light box. Yes, I would have thrown out that image.
I still do not understand how sharpness is " less appealing in most cases such as with digital to me it just seems less life like ". Sharpness is less lifelike? less appealing? I find short depth of field that isolates an object generally very distracting. As an effect it can be usefull but as a shooting style I do not understand it.