Bertram2
Gone elsewhere
As the technology advances, the craft recedes. Manufacturers and processing services take over more and more of the work and the picture decisions, while photographers get lazier and less competent. While technology holds out to us more possibilites than photographers have ever known, we use them less and less resourcefully. We have, on the whole, no idea how much we could achieve, and it doesn't occur to us to find out by trying. Too often we are content with sloppy, mediocre work. The one thing we've gained is spontaneity – useless without perception.
Thinking back to the times I started with a VF fixed lens camera and a Gossen meter, mostly used for incident metering, I can't find all this progress since the 70s overwhelming.
Not speaking about pros, just about us, the amateurs I have to realize that It HAS offered new possibilties for working more precisely under certain circumstances,
but it has not made it easier to get more good results, as the promise was.
In former times we controlled the camera, nowadys we control automated systems
which tend to fail if it gets too difficult, AE, AF etc.
Maybe allauto has accelerated the process of taking pictures, in a limited way tho. And if so, what have we gained now with that acceleration ? Not too much I think, tho the technical effort was enormous. Would not miss much if it wasn't there.
I just would have to take (only sometimes) some more time for a shot, as I did it in former times.
One of the elder gentlemen at the CVUG once asked: "Why does progress always mean a loss of quality ?"
I would ask : "Why is acceleration always understood as progress, and why does it mean always a loss of quality ?"
bertram
Thinking back to the times I started with a VF fixed lens camera and a Gossen meter, mostly used for incident metering, I can't find all this progress since the 70s overwhelming.
Not speaking about pros, just about us, the amateurs I have to realize that It HAS offered new possibilties for working more precisely under certain circumstances,
but it has not made it easier to get more good results, as the promise was.
In former times we controlled the camera, nowadys we control automated systems
which tend to fail if it gets too difficult, AE, AF etc.
Maybe allauto has accelerated the process of taking pictures, in a limited way tho. And if so, what have we gained now with that acceleration ? Not too much I think, tho the technical effort was enormous. Would not miss much if it wasn't there.
I just would have to take (only sometimes) some more time for a shot, as I did it in former times.
One of the elder gentlemen at the CVUG once asked: "Why does progress always mean a loss of quality ?"
I would ask : "Why is acceleration always understood as progress, and why does it mean always a loss of quality ?"
bertram