Pookeyhead
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- Name
- David
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Almost every shot has been taken before including yours.
No it hasn't.
Almost every shot has been taken before including yours.
This post really is on a hiding to nothing.
I'm sure many in here would like it to be, but it's not. It's not only possible to take original images every day... not even plausible... but in fact, very easy. You just have to think differently.
A lot of people on here (although not all) do like to simply recreate shots that have been taken a thousand times before. The hard part for me was accepting that lack of originality. I have, I can now move on![]()
Including me, I agree. I just dont think debating the point is going to get anyone anywhere.
That may make some feel better, yes.
I have personally gone out to recreate shots i have seen, because I think they are great. I have also found in doing that you learn an awful lot about your kit and your abilities and it focuses you in and hones techniques. Often you have no idea how that shot was actually taken and 99% of the time you have NO chance of recreating it anywhere near how you have seen someone else take it, so it pushes boundaries. Its like taking a great cooks dish you have tasted and trying to recreate it without knowing the ingredients or recipe. Chances are you may come up with something great too but it wont be the same.
There is also the point as in with places like Dunstanburgh and Bamburgh that going there to shoot is an excuse to sit and soak in the beautiful landscapes and its no accident that people have taken the shots they have, they were taken because the viewpoint was stunning.
Maybe some people don't need to be made to feel "better", maybe they're quite happy as they are and maybe they don't feel the need to justify anything. Who is anyone else to say they're wrong?
It depends if they genuinely feel that there's no originality to be had in the world any more, which some in here seem to think is the case. If someone's quite happy doing what they do, good luck to them. I'll support anyone to shoot what they want, but if they just feel they do what they do because there's nothing else to do, that would be a shame.
..and they're almost the same shot.
Easy...
http://i.imgur.com/uUBygd6.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/ObuAVXR.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/1S0HiaY.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/8uMZZXX.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/m43JmlU.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/m9QifgU.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/SICZxii.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/CKdVrdJ.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/5b7w3sg.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/FnxJA4n.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/UcRQFKD.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/7OolaOJ.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/1FYSFrQ.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/PJVLQhE.jpg
I could literally keep going all day long with this.
No one's saying you can't or shouldn't take the same subject just because it' been shot before, but don't try to pretend it's original if you do.... because it's not. You've headed straight to the exact place everyone goes to, and as a result you'll show the castle exactly the same as everyone else is.
There's are more original takes on it to be found, but as you imagine, they're a lot harder to find.
http://i.imgur.com/7F2bLeY.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/XJahjlI.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/VyBD1px.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/fgt0F2K.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/cQq8E14.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/XlE7wRI.jpg
It's not the subject that needs to be original (or have more originality rather) but how it's approached.
That's an oxymoron? If it's genuinely found, then it truly exists and there's no dispute.... find beauty where there is none.
Ok, where this none to the casual eye?That's an oxymoron? If it's genuinely found, then it truly exists and there's no dispute.
For me recreating is the photographic version of plagiarism, change a few words et voila. There's nothing to stop people doing all of the above but with some originality. PMN nailed it, if that's what people want to do then that's cool
Stunning views are nice to photograph yes I am guilty of that pleasure myself but real photographic skill comes where one can find beauty where there is none.
For me recreating is the photographic version of plagiarism, change a few words et voila.
I have to agree. Knowingly copying another's shot is plagiarism if you're setting out with the intention of copying. If you did that with a book, or a painting, there would be no argument, you'd just get accused of copying someone else's work, and therefore you work would be dismissed as such. I've no idea why people think different rules apply with photography. The irony is that the same people will go ballistic if anyone else posts one of their images on-line (even if that image was a copy of someone else's to begin with).
A book or painting does not already exist , a place which is photographed is already there before it is photographed therefore cannot really be looked at in the same way.
A book can be copied word for word ,a painting or photo would be very much more difficult to duplicate identically.
but here we're talking about seeing a shot, and thinking, "I'll go there... and do that". That's plagiarism.
That's what I think about pictures of the moon!
I don't have a problem with people photographing the moon and it can be a good technical exercise in photographing something you wouldn't normally photograph but 99.99% of them are going to look the same.
Steve.
I'm sure many in here would like it to be, but it's not. It's not only possible to take original images every day... not even plausible... but in fact, very easy. You just have to think differently.
I think it depends fundamentally on whether you set out to pass off the idea as your own.I have to agree. Knowingly copying another's shot is plagiarism if you're setting out with the intention of copying. If you did that with a book, or a painting, there would be no argument, you'd just get accused of copying someone else's work, and therefore you work would be dismissed as such. I've no idea why people think different rules apply with photography. The irony is that the same people will go ballistic if anyone else posts one of their images on-line (even if that image was a copy of someone else's to begin with).
2600_L by dicktay2000, on Flickr
Curves by dicktay2000, on Flickr
Thirsty birds at St Ives village green. by dicktay2000, on FlickrMusician analogies are about the closest we get, and this is absolutely correct....
Showing off a recreation of a classic composition may be tedious (and it usually is); but in terms of artistic integrity I see it as more analogous to a musician doing a cover version than an attempt at dishonest prestige-theft.
...
Different types of talent, I'd argue.A valid argument might be that someone who can play stairway to heaven brilliantly has more talent than someone who knocks out a crap original tune. Alternatively, some people might value the originality over the craft.
The new take on the song is preferable to me. But there is value in trying to faithfully recreate a piece of music you like as a personal project. It may be tedious or pointless for others but it's a valid exercise and not necessarily in bad faith. It's also a reasonable way to learn, I guess.The cover version analogy is an interesting one. I suppose it puts a valid point forward. However, what makes the most interesting cover version - a faithful reproduction by a tribute band, or those awful recreations you used to get on 70's "music for pleasure" albums (showing my age now)... or a completely different retake on the original? I'd argue that listening to a cover that tries really hard to recreate the original is something most wouldn't like to listen to, as you may as well just listen to the original, yet a completely re-arranged and remade cover version that uses a different arrangement, different instrumentation etc, can be as interesting as the original.
The new take on the song is preferable to me. But there is value in trying to faithfully recreate a piece of music you like as a personal project. It may be tedious or pointless for others
My italics.The new take on the song is preferable to me. But there is value in trying to faithfully recreate a piece of music you like as a personal project. It may be tedious or pointless for others but it's a valid exercise and not necessarily in bad faith. It's also a reasonable way to learn, I guess.
Just don't expect anyone to care. Like those photos of Buachaille or pictures of star trails.
For that to apply to a photograph, you would have to start with someone elses jpeg and edit it a bit.For me recreating is the photographic version of plagiarism, change a few words et voila.
Not necessarily. For it to be plagiarism you would just have to try to pass someone else's idea off as your own.For that to apply to a photograph, you would have to start with someone elses jpeg and edit it a bit.
I guess there is also the point that Plagiarism is NOT a crime, whereas Copyright Theft IS.
I agree completely, however The Australian Pink Floyd and Bjorn Again play to huge audiences, so it's not a universal opinion.The cover version analogy is an interesting one. I suppose it puts a valid point forward. However, what makes the most interesting cover version - a faithful reproduction by a tribute band, or those awful recreations you used to get on 70's "music for pleasure" albums (showing my age now)... or a completely different retake on the original? I'd argue that listening to a cover that tries really hard to recreate the original is something most wouldn't like to listen to, as you may as well just listen to the original, yet a completely re-arranged and remade cover version that uses a different arrangement, different instrumentation etc, can be as interesting as the original.
This^It's not a crime, it's a civil matter. That's why it's called infringement rather than theft.
Steve.
It should be about whatever the individual wants it to be about. That's pretty much it.