mrtoad
Suspended / Banned
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- Geof
- Edit My Images
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no but i like a lower horizon for sky shots or more land for land shots
i think the PP here is quite necessary...photos and all art induce emotion...not realism
I only run an image through photoshop if I am happy with it beforehand.
Photoshop or any other processing programme will make a good image even better, not make a bad image good.
Most of my photoshopping consists of enhancing colour/contrast, cropping, removing minor imperfections and sharpening a touch.
im not sure that that is entirely true, you can make an average picture stand out and be eyecatching if its treated well, obviously though you cant polish a turd![]()
No offense meant, but why does such a view have to be shi'te?
The view about photography is personal. Its not about right or wrong, its about individual preference, isn't it?
I hold what you are calling a 'purist view'; but I do respect you for having just the opposite. To each of us, our own.


Only what is seen with the eye is unprocessed. Everything else is...
Only what is seen with the eye is unprocessed. Everything else is...
I shoot in raw and as such the process for me isn't finished in camera, even if exposure and composition are all how I want them. My photos can be improved with adjustments such as levels and they all require sharpening. I don't really see this as post processing but merely part of the process of digital photography.
because it's a viewpoint founded on the erronious assumption that an image straight from the camera, by being 'unaltered' or unsullied somehow, makes it 'better' than one which the photographer has laboured to create, both by use of in-camera settings and in PP using Photoshop or similar programs.
And it's bloody wrong!
The camera will apply various processing algorithms to the electronic information recorded on the sensor according to the settings you choose. It's already been through some form of processing whether you like it or not. That image should then be imported into another program to crop and finalise the image according to the output for which it's intended. That's PP as well...even at that minimal level...
Even in the days of film, the photographer made similar decisions all along the process, from the choice of film, to the chemistry he chose to process the film, the temperature of that chemistry and the dilution and length of processing.
Then the choice of enlarger (if shooting negative film), paper and how he/she chose to print - all those processes had an impact on the final image...
By letting the camera choose the level of processing and doing nothing else, the photographer is simply choosing to leave all that decision-making to the software engineers who designed the camera you chose - the only choice you made in the image process in fact...
What is better? Taking all of the decisions and controlling your image-process from beginning to end, or let a Japanese software tech do it for you...
I call it being lazy, myself... it's the level of interaction we assign to 'camera-handlers' in the Military, as opposed to photographers who actually create something...
You want to be classed as a mere button-pusher, that's fine, but it's not photography...
If somone is happy to post a straight out the camera picture then that's fine. My issue comes when somone gets the hump because their straight out the camera shot is lacking in contrast or sharpness etc and you say so.
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When I look at my RAW pics, with a neutral setting in camera (so no adjustments are added) they just look washed out and lacking in punch. Perhaps those that get good straight out of camera images have their in camera settings to a picture style that does give a little sharpen, boost and tweaks some colours.
I think you would have an issue with me then. I recently submitted some pics to a local show. The rules are that digital cameras are allowed, but no processing is allowed. I am really disappointed at how washed out, non-contrasted my pictures look in comparison to the other photos in the classes. I just don't know how they manage to get their pictures like that.
These two posts say it all, perfectly
Post processing is PART OF the art of creating digital photographs not an optional extra![]()
Seems we have a new 'purist' sect emerging, where 'proper' photographs have to be unprocessed to be worthy...
What a load of utter shi'ite...
Quite agree.
Thinking back to using film, especially B&W
1. Chose film to suit subject / lighting (digi equivalent set ISO)
2. After shooting chose developer - high or low acutance (digi equivalent in camera sharpening setting)
3. Print picture having chosen suitable grade of paper (digi equivalent - add a bit of pop PP)
4. Last of all spend hours dodging, burning, split toning, split grading, using different papers, developers and toners in the darkroom (digi equivalent - hours spent doing PP)
Tadaaaaa! Result a nice original black and white photograph. Have a read of Ansel Adams trilogy of books on the camera, film and printing.
David
I think you would have an issue with me then. I recently submitted some pics to a local show. The rules are that digital cameras are allowed, but no processing is allowed. I am really disappointed at how washed out, non-contrasted my pictures look in comparison to the other photos in the classes. I just don't know how they manage to get their pictures like that.