yeah, I watched that the other day, pretty impressive stuff and makes sense that light it so important and not the camera.

Just goes to reiterate (IMHO) that photography is about light 1st, composition 2nd, subject 3rd, and finally level of equipment![]()
hey treeman....don't you remember this post.....
http://www.talkphotography.co.uk/forums/showthread.php?t=211399
think I started a trend!...except mine are processed in phone, not at an expensive professional retouchers.
I'm thinking of upgrading to the big 5 megapixel IP4......
Lee's taken a lot of stick for that shoot, but I must say I was pretty impressed by it. He should really have used bedsheets or shower curtains though, rather than "proper" light modifiers, to put his point across better...
His site keeps crashing under the overload. I was just trying to read his replies to some of the criticism, then it died on me!
How do they 'fall apart'?At large flickr size they more or less fall apart.
What is a 'complete' finished product?without all components in place, including gear, there is no complete finished product.
How do they 'fall apart'?
Same question really, how do you measure the 'quality of the actual image'?quality of the actual image is really poor
Same question really, how do you measure the 'quality of the actual image'?
Just goes to reiterate (IMHO) that photography is about light 1st, composition 2nd, subject 3rd, and finally level of equipment![]()
Same question really, how do you measure the 'quality of the actual image'?
Pretty impressive. I'd have a job trying to do the same with wildlife though!![]()
I'm not expert but that's a stunning image and just goes to show you don't need to top dollar equipment to obtain good results.
Of course it's not going to blow up to billboard size but that wasn't the point he was trying to make. Shoot what you got and get the best results....
I'm more guilty than most of spending more time buying equipment than actually using it...
It can be push further to remade the grainy blotchy look by processing it 'plastic fantastic' à la canon style.
How is that a measure of any 'quality of the actual image'? You are measuring technical details but that are not related to the image, but solely concern the digital construction of it.the IQ of the image - its very grainny, blotchy and the colours are not very smooth. just about fine at 800px just but not worthy of anything else.
How is that a measure of any 'quality of the actual image'? You are measuring technical details but that are not related to the image, but solely concern the digital construction of it.
Are the images understandable as photographs? Of course they are. Do they project and idea or feeling? Of course they do.
Do you see images like that (outside this experiment) published in a commercial journals, used in advertising, in a fashion magazines and printed as commercial art? I believe that you do and, for that alone, are therefore perfectly acceptable 'quality', they do not 'more or less fall apart' and therefore are a 'complete finished product'.
I'm not expert but that's a stunning image and just goes to show you don't need to top dollar equipment to obtain good results.
well not quite - the images have been through processing which does a lot to them compared to the originals.
But the 'quality' (whatever that is) is still not anything to do with the final result - a photograph. You are zooming in on pixels (or some other pointless nothingness) and comparing with what you would get if taking the same image with a large sensor camera and a top grade lens.because it is - image quality not photographic quality.
But the 'quality' (whatever that is) is still not anything to do with the final result - a photograph. You are zooming in on pixels (or some other pointless nothingness) and comparing with what you would get if taking the same image with a large sensor camera and a top grade lens.
This does not alter the fact that the photographer created some stunning images with a pretty low grade (if measured in a laboratory) piece of kit. Whether you like them or not (I don't as it goes) you cannot really argue that they are poor images.
the photographer created the images with the lights and photoshop and I do think they are poor. I don't like made in photoshop images
But your opinion about Photoshopped images does not make anything 'poor quality'.the photographer created the images with the lights and photoshop and I do think they are poor. I don't like made in photoshop images
