>Great photos are 95% technique and 5% equipment.

>Unfortunately one can not go out and buy technique; one has to study,
and >practice, and put in lots of effort to acquire it. So it will
never be as fashionable as >buying a new camera, or lens, or filter,
or whatever.

>So, in some ways a poor but serious photographer is better off than a
rich one. >She learns to work around the equipments limitations, and
even to use those >limitations as a pictorial element in her work.


Good points.  I'll tell my friend he should stop buying stuff so he
can focus on figuring out how to use what he does have :o)  right now
I've realized I love to crop pictures on the computer - so I'm trying
to take pictures that don't need to be cropped.  One step at a time!

rg2

On 9/10/07, graywolf <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Great photos are 95% technique and 5% equipment.
>
> Unfortunately one can not go out and buy technique; one has to study, and 
> practice, and put in lots of effort to acquire it. So it will never be as 
> fashionable as buying a new camera, or lens, or filter, or whatever.
>
> So, in some ways a poor but serious photographer is better off than a rich 
> one. She learns to work around the equipments limitations, and even to use 
> those limitations as a pictorial element in her work.
>
>
>
> Rebekah wrote:
>
> >
> >    I heard a story once, that was
> > probably an urban legend, about some guy who shot a fashion shoot wtih
> > disposable cameras and turned out great pictures.  I don't know if
> > it's true, but I think it could be, because knowing your equipment and
> > its capabilities is probably the most important thing (after owning a
> > Pentax, anyways) ;)
>
> --
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> PDML@pdml.net
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>


-- 
"the subject of a photograph is far less important than its composition"

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