It’s fungus.
And its “lens”.
It’s fungus.
And its “lens”.
Low light is hard on autofocus. If your camera has trouble handling autofocus in low light, the best you can do is practice manual focusing on those situations.
You just asked one of the hardest questions to answer in photography. Finding and establishing an identity and personal style is a life long pursuit that is never truly complete.
Honestly, don’t get too bogged down on it. A personal style is something that emerges with experience. The most important thing is do your own thing and be original. Which is infinitely easier said than done.
The level of profissional photographers that can be found on this sub never ceases to amaze me.
Last week some guy was shocked that his client was complaining they couldn’t print his photos to any meaningful size. Turns out he was delivering 2MP images.
Today we have an entire photo shoot out of focus because the lens has a focusing ring.
Up next, how some poor sods lost their wedding photos because of a meddling lens cap.
I agree with a lot of what you’re saying here.
Let me clarify that I’m not mad at the existence of generative AI. It’s fascinating and a lot of fun and I encourage everyone to play around with it. I would never publish the result of a MidJourney prompt as “my” work, but that’s my own personal choice.
But I’m not even denying there are forms of creating genuinely original and meritorious art with recourse to AI tech. That’s all well and good.
Random people posting on Flickr don’t matter
I agree that the individuals doing that don’t matter. They’re frauds, but ultimately irrelevant.
But platforms like Flickr do matter, or at least I would like for them to matter - if nothing else, as communities where artists can share their work and appreciate the work of others. It’s just a nice feature of the internet to be able to have this kind of communities.
But they have absolutely no mechanism to identify these AI works. I worry because it profoundly degrades the usability and usefulness of those platforms. If I need to comb through thousands of fake photos, Flickr becomes unusable.
I would argue we need more AI, developed with the purpose of identifying the products of AI for us. So that we can look at an image online and know if it was made that way.
Of course this is important, not only for online art communities, but even more to prevent the onslaught of serious problems that fake photos and videos will certainly bring in the near future.
There are… a lot of them.
In no particular order… Paul Strand, Ralph Gibson, Diane Arbus, Sebastião Salgado, Ansel Adams, Alfred Stieglitz, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Josef Koudelka, Marvin Newman, Alfred Eisenstaedt, Robert Frank, Robert Doisneau, Willy Ronis, Eduardo Gageiro, William Klein, Richard Avedon, William Eggleston, Saul Leiter, Anton Corbijn, Fan Ho, Hiroshi Sugimoto, Michael Kenna…
That’s just the tip of the iceberg. Look those up and others will come up.
Of course. Don’t think of composition rules as rules at all. I should have mentioned that.
These are just the formal elements of art and should be studied, but when it comes to practice, they should only be sensibly applied at the discretion of the artist. Not taken as a prescription for what “correct” art ought to be.
I’m very familiar with Maier, Sutkus and countless other great photographers.
This is different. I’ve always enjoyed browsing through the work of anonymous photographers, you can find extremely talented people with super interesting work. Flickr used to be great for that.
But this makes that a lot harder. You have to be constantly on watch for this kind of fakery.
Start by understanding the formal elements of art. Use those to analyze composition.
Then go beyond that and try to understand what makes each photo elicit the emotionally reactions they do.
With Leiter, colors are a huge component. Look up color theory if you need to have better tools to analyze that.
Lighting is also important to understand, to get a better technical understanding of how the results were achieved.
All of it will influence your work one way or another. But make sure you don’t get in too deep with only one artist. Try to diversify the art you’re exposed to, in order to diversify your influences.
I fully agree. I don’t get it either.
Sure, this guy, for example. Now it’s so obvious. But the first time I looked at the photos in my phone, he totally fooled me.
I feel like they take some well framed and pretty, but also irrelevant images
They feel irrelevant to you. They may feel the same about some of your photos, while you may consider them to be your best work. What makes someone enjoy a photograph will vary wildly from person to person.
What makes a good photo indeed? I look at Henri Cartier-Bresson photos and some of them just don’t do anything for me.
And sometimes, I see a shot with 10 likes from some anonymous guy on Flickr and consider it an absolute masterpiece.
And then there are photos that no one would look at twice, weren’t it for the context they’re inserted in. Some photos stand alone. Some photos owe their meaning and value to a bigger context.
There is no objective criteria to decide what a good photo is, especially from an artistic standpoint. I think this is a very important fact to internalize for any artist, photographer or otherwise.
My most used lenses don’t have autofocus. Yes, autofocus is great but it’s also a tradeoff.
If you like to use fast lenses, autofocus adds a lot of size, weight and cost.
What you describe is more of a theme than a style or genre.
I suspect there are more men than women practicing it, but that doesn’t mean it’s harder to succeed as a woman, just that fewer women tend to do it.
A good percentage of my favorite photographers are women, some of them going all the way back to the 1960s.
So you shouldn’t really care about the demographics, just go for it. It’s a very competetive field, it’s hard for everyone.
You learn the tools you really use. Everything else you just learn about.
Portraits, either studio or environmental. There’s something special about photographing people that I don’t really get from other types of photography.
I also enjoy photographing animals a lot, both pets and wildlife.
Living things, I guess.
I’m not sure what we’re supposed to talk about. The several thoughts in this post seem disconnected and contradictory.
There is no such thing as “full frame equivalent aperture”. The only thing that changes when using a lens in a smaller than full frame sensor is crop. It’s the same light, its the same aperture, just cropped.
People talk about “aperture equivalence” because to get the same perspective on a cropped sensor, you’ll need a wider focal length, and longer focal lenghts will have a shallower depth of field when compared to wider focal lenghts at the same distance. It’s convoluted and dumb.
For any given focal length, the aperture is the same on all cameras, the same light goes in, the depth of field at a given distance is the same. A 50 f1.8 is always a 50 f1.8.
And none of that has any bearing on ISO or the sensor’s performance.
I use leather straps, waist level crossed on shoulders like a bag, rather than hanging from the neck. I buy them from this british guy who have been hand making them and selling them on ebay for almost a decade. They wouldn’t be adequate for big dslrs but they’re perfect for mirrorless setups.
They’re very low profile and they’re great to wrap around the hand when they’re not on the shoulders.
It’s a bit silly but always thought oem straps were tacky as hell, besides being super uncomfortable.
You don’t need a gray card if you don’t care about color accuracy. And you don’t need to care about color accuracy… unless you’re doing something like product photography.
Then you really need a gray card and a calibrated display.