Or change to a prime with an appropriate focal length.

We were required to print "full frame" my first semester in school, just to demonstrate we had not inadvertently composed an image that cropped elements of the scene out of the image frame.

On 8/24/2013 1:11 PM, Bob Sullivan wrote:
Cropping was a lot more exacting in the days before zooms.
You didn't just zoom in or out to get your cropping right.
You had to zoom with your feet.
Regards,  Bob S.

On Sat, Aug 24, 2013 at 12:53 AM, steve harley <p...@paper-ape.com> wrote:
on 2013-08-23 21:34 Matthew Hunt wrote

On Fri, Aug 23, 2013 at 11:26 PM, John <johnsess...@yahoo.com> wrote:

I've never heard of "get it exact in the camera" before.

I've always heard "get it right in camera" ... not the same thing.


I sure have. There are absolutely no-crop fetishists on the
Internet... and there were in the film days, too (showing the edges of
the frame as "proof").


some did tremendous work within that constraint; while i'm not a purist
about it myself, being close to someone who was (in the 1960s), i think it
offers a certain simplicity - first thought, best thought



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