>>
>> Like, so absolutely!
>>
>
>Ok, stop it now Cotty!
>
>Christian
No no - it's 'Coddy'
Cheers,
Cotty
___/\__
|| (O) | People, Places, Pastiche
||=|www.macads.co.uk/snaps
_
- Original Message -
From: "Cotty" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
> Like, so absolutely!
>
Ok, stop it now Cotty!
Christian
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
- Original Message -
From: "Gonz"
Subject: Re: photography vs cameras
Interesting article. Do you think Laurenceau's work falls in that
category?
Heck no, I just like stirring the pot..
Trouble maker... ;)
But much of what he says it tr
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I shot a wedding last winter (I don't do them often, anymore). While
at the location we had chosen for our portraits, another photographer
was also working.
She had a couple of cheap studio flash units, I think they were the
low end Photogenics that aren't actually called
>> You mean a computer whizz rather than a chemistry whizz don't you?
>
>No.
>Photography is not about chemistry.
>It is about light.
>
>William Robb
Like, so absolutely!
Cheers,
Cotty
___/\__
|| (O) | People, Places, Pastiche
||=|www.macads.co.uk/snaps
I survive it by seldom watching it. There are good things happening in the
world, but you would never know from American TV News programing. Unfortunately,
many think the world is as bad a place as they portray it. I sometimes wonder
how many suicides a year they are responsible for.
--
Cotty w
Quite nicely, thank you.
Cil my Landlord.
Where's my chainsaw?
Everyone's gonna PAY.
Cotty wrote:
snip
I don't understand how north America survives most news programmes.
Cotty wrote:
>
> While staying at tvs, I did some channel-flicking and MY GOD what a
> nightmare. Mercifully I was able to catch a bit of the BBC news on BBC
> World. I don't understand how north America survives most news programmes.
>
> Cheers,
> Cotty
>
Easy - we who survive don't watch th
>>The ethical
>> standards have probably improved as the technical ability to get
>what
>> you want without cheating has improved.
>
>Umm, have you not been watching CNN lately?
>I think the world as a whole is becoming less ethical, and
>journalism, while not leading the herd, is certainly somew
"William Robb" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Read Mike Johnston's latest over at Luminous Landscape.
http://www.luminous-landscape.com/columns/sm-june-04.shtml
Notice he mentions the PDML :)
He also mentions this photo:
http://www.robertstech.com/graphics/pages/7d202806.htm
But he got the story wr
Interesting article. Do you think Laurenceau's work falls in that category?
rg
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
- Original Message -
From: "Gonz"
Subject: Re: photography vs cameras
Have you ever seen this fellow's (contemporary) work?
http://www.photo.net/photodb/folder
- Original Message -
From: "Gonz"
Subject: Re: photography vs cameras
> Have you ever seen this fellow's (contemporary) work?
>
> http://www.photo.net/photodb/folder?folder_id=338558
>
> In his case I don't think his talent is due to his equipment, ev
- Original Message -
From: "Nick Clark"
Subject: Re: photography vs cameras
> You mean a computer whizz rather than a chemistry whizz don't you?
No.
Photography is not about chemistry.
It is about light.
William Robb
You mean a computer whizz rather than a chemistry whizz don't you?
Nick
-Original Message-
From: "William Robb"<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
So you now need to be a computer whiz rather than a photographic
technologist to be a competent photographer.
Kinda changes the whole concept
>
> As I understand it, Steve McCurry (the National Geographic afghan girl
> photographer) has always been in the "let the camera do the technical
> stuff" camp.
Currently he uses F100s - before that he was using the N90s. I don't
kn ow what he was using at the time of the "Afghan Girl" shot - t
- Original Message -
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: photography vs Cameras
>
>The ethical
> standards have probably improved as the technical ability to get
what
> you want without cheating has improved.
Umm, have you not been watching CNN lately?
I th
Hi,
>> Ethiopia has superb food!
> I've heard they didn't have any food, but of course that was from some
> organization that wanted me to send money to feed the starving Ethiopians.
Not all Ethiopians are in Ethiopia, and not all Ethiopians in Ethiopia
starve during famines.
Nevertheless, the
>From: George Sinos <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Eliminating the technology threshold opens up the field to more folks
>that
>are good at seeing the image but not good technologists.
The "leaves you free to concentrate on framing" theory. I find
increasingly that pros are trusting automation to han
I've heard they didn't have any food, but of course that was from some
organization that wanted me to send money to feed the starving Ethiopians.
--
Bob W wrote:
Ethiopia has superb food!
--
graywolf
http://graywolfphoto.com/graywolf.html
If you accept the evolution theory, the answer would actually be that the
egg came first. It was laid by an animal that was nearly, but not quite, a
hen.
That's why I said the chicken... :)
Hi,
>> No, not intending to debate the chicken or egg. It's obvious the chicken
>> came first.
> If you accept the evolution theory, the answer would actually be that the
> egg came first. It was laid by an animal that was nearly, but not quite, a
> hen.
There is a very fine Ethiopian dish call
On Mon, 7 Jun 2004, Tom C wrote:
> No, not intending to debate the chicken or egg. It's obvious the chicken
> came first.
If you accept the evolution theory, the answer would actually be that the
egg came first. It was laid by an animal that was nearly, but not quite, a
hen.
anders
---
In the beginning..., the chicken was the egg! Self replicating molecules...
Regards,
Bob...
From: "Tom C" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> No, not intending to debate the chicken or egg. It's obvious the chicken
> came first.
That's because you probably already have a spouse better than you need. :)
Tom C.
From: "Steve Desjardins" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: photography vs cameras
Date: Mon, 07 Jun 2004 14:43:24 -0400
You know, at G
You know, at GFM someone had a D2H with a VR 80-400 sitting on the table
in our area, so I was able to pick it up and "dry fire" a bit. It's a
big thing, but fits nice in your hands. Of course, if I wanted a camera
like this I'd have to switch since Pentax will never make a pro model
like this.
- Original Message -
From: "Lon Williamson"
Subject: Re: photography vs cameras
> I dunno. It's possible to turn this arguement upside down.
> Photoshop is not exactly an easy take. Read any understandable
> smart flash manuals recently? One hundred plus
Didn't Minolta actually have a model out that took cards?
You want DOF preview, stick in some smarts? I remember
rolling my eyes
John Francis wrote:
There's also a certain amount spent on stuff that looks like a good
idea when you buy it, but somehow never really ends up being used.
Many years
I dunno. It's possible to turn this arguement upside down.
Photoshop is not exactly an easy take. Read any understandable
smart flash manuals recently? One hundred plus pages of Japanese-
To-English that makes you think that flash is one hell of a lot
smarter than you are. Cameras and lenses th
Original Message-
From: Rob Studdert [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, June 06, 2004 8:09 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: photography vs cameras
On 6 Jun 2004 at 19:52, Paul Stenquist wrote:
> Touche.
I'd be extremely surprised if there weren't images to rival S
On 6 Jun 2004 at 19:52, Paul Stenquist wrote:
> Touche.
I'd be extremely surprised if there weren't images to rival St. Ansels in on-
line galleries (considering the capabilities of the media).
Why there seems to be such a belief that only the past photographers like Ansel
and HCB were capable
From: John Francis [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, June 06, 2004 3:17 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: photography vs cameras
I knew _someone_ was going to say that. I had a good idea who, too.
Personally I think there is a far closer parallel between contemporary
image capture technology a
On Sun, 6 Jun 2004 17:01:38 -0600, William Robb wrote:
> I thought they missed the boat when they put an inline 4
> instead of a Wankel into the Miata.
> They fixed that issue with the RX-8 though.
I agree about the rotary in the Miata. I've heard of 12A and 13B swaps
into a Miata, and lots of p
- Original Message -
From: "Doug Franklin" <
Subject: Re: photography vs cameras
> On Fri, 4 Jun 2004 18:41:53 -0600, William Robb wrote:
>
> > I think I am going to have to buy a little British car of
> > some sort. I like fixing things.
>
> We
On Fri, 4 Jun 2004 18:41:53 -0600, William Robb wrote:
> I think I am going to have to buy a little British car of
> some sort. I like fixing things.
Well, if you get a Miata, you'll have a reliable "British sports car".
That's the upside and the downside. You'll get a lot of the "British
sport
- Original Message -
From: "Bob W"
Subject: Re: photography vs cameras
> Hi,
>
> > Photography seems to be the only profession where it is accepted
that
> > one needs little or no technical knowledge to practice the trade.
>
> I think IT has you beat b
- Original Message -
From: "John Francis"
Subject: Re: photography vs cameras
>
> I use _my_ Lear Jet as a dust blower to keep the Van Goghs clean
...
One of the local Indian bands near where I live has a Lear sitting in
a quonset on the reservation.
The thing has
- Original Message -
From: "Tom C"
Subject: Re: photography vs cameras
> William Robb wrote:
>
> ...and photography is now pretty much a point and shoot game.
>
> I know what you intended Bill... but disagree as stated. :) One
can have
> technology do eve
- Original Message -
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: photography vs cameras
>
> A lighter load, more shots before reloading, and better lens
options?
> Presumably 35mm was adopted because it either gave users more good
shots,
> or an equal number of adequately good shots for less wei
edwin wrote:
> The people bemoaning the death of "photography" are overlooking
> the fact that the goal of most photography is not "photography".
... a pearl of great price, IMHO
Bill
Bob W wrote:
Hi,
http://www.sportsshooter.com/news/1198
Another tired example of trotting out the 1/10 of 1% crowd.
Interesting read, but it has as little bearing on what most
photographers do or need in their equipment.
I'm not surprised he's got Holgaroids, carrying all that stu
Hi,
>>"I was watching a rich suburban mom shooting pictures of her son's team
>>at
>>a high school track meet today. She was using A Nikon D2h and 300/2.8
>>with a 1.4 converter--about $8000 worth of equipment and better than
>>what
>>I as a pro was carrying. Watching what she was shooting I'm
Lon Williamson wrote:
I doubt all pros in photography are equipped with the finest.
In my neck of the woods, it seems to be a lot like the music
scene. Full time local musicians are poor as church mice, and
so are many full time photographers. In both cases, the equipment
would be considered marg
I doubt all pros in photography are equipped with the finest.
In my neck of the woods, it seems to be a lot like the music
scene. Full time local musicians are poor as church mice, and
so are many full time photographers. In both cases, the equipment
would be considered marginal by many. Yet the
Yo Bill,
You can do some work on the Titan as well if you purchase a service
manual. It's not as mysterious as it seems.
Paul
On Jun 4, 2004, at 8:41 PM, William Robb wrote:
- Original Message -
From: "John Francis"
Subject: Re: photography vs cameras
Back in the days wh
- Original Message -
From: "John Francis"
Subject: Re: photography vs cameras
>
> Back in the days when cars weren't totally computerised, it was
very
> common for people to repair most minor problems with their own
hands.
> (There was also far more economi
Bob,
Very well said. I was thinking of that very same comment by Hurn when I
read the original post ;-))
Shel Belinkoff
> [Original Message]
> From: Bob W <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Date: 6/4/2004 4:12:20 PM
> Subject: Re: photography vs
Hi,
>"I was watching a rich suburban mom shooting pictures of her son's team
>at
>a high school track meet today. She was using A Nikon D2h and 300/2.8
>with a 1.4 converter--about $8000 worth of equipment and better than what
>I as a pro was carrying. Watching what she was shooting I'm convince
>
>
> - Original Message -
> From: "Frantisek Vlcek"
> Subject: Re: photography vs cameras
>
>
>
> > But it still drives me crazy when, as you said, nobody in their
> sane
> > mind without the knowledge and feel would try to repair the
>
> ein> If the goal is actually a couple of great photos of her kid, $8000 would
> ein> buy a certain amount of time from a skilled photographer.
> ein> Yes, this is less satisfying than doing it yourself, but I sort of resent
> ein> the idea that all it takes to make pro-quality photos is a pro
some
people really honestly do pick things up rather easily.
-Shawn
-Original Message-
From: Frantisek Vlcek [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, June 04, 2004 5:04 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: photography vs cameras
ein> If the goal is actually a couple of great photo
On Fri, 4 Jun 2004, Mike Nosal wrote:
> If someone spends $8000 (or $800, or $80) on photo equipment and they are
> satisfied by the outcome, good for them. Let them spend their money on what
> they want.
And fund development for *your* camera.
Kostas
At 05:04 AM 6/4/2004 -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>Watching what she was shooting I'm convinced she
>got a lot of dull, stunningly sharp pictures.
Unless you saw her photos, you don't know what she got. And what's dull to
you can be a treasured memory to someone else. Or maybe she did get 99 du
- Original Message -
From: "Frantisek Vlcek"
Subject: Re: photography vs cameras
> But it still drives me crazy when, as you said, nobody in their
sane
> mind without the knowledge and feel would try to repair their car,
but
> anybody with a camera thinks he is the
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