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View Full Version : What makes a photographer when everyone is taking pictures?



diversey
21-Jan-2016, 09:10
https://youtu.be/hA_uVCCD5Is

Alan Gales
21-Jan-2016, 12:15
I agree. He is definitely a photographer. Very nice images!

Thanks for sharing.

Drew Wiley
28-Jan-2016, 13:49
I saw that segment. They've had some others too. We also have local photographers frequently features on PBS. There's a lot of real talent out there, even people
in my own city I've never personally met, or ever seen actual work by (as opposed to a TV segment). Thanks.

Jac@stafford.net
28-Jan-2016, 15:25
What makes one a writer when almost anyone can have a blog or even post here?
.

Sirius Glass
28-Jan-2016, 15:57
Photographers take photographs, the rest take snap shots. Remember that many crappy snap shots provided Kodak the R&D funds to make superior film products.

Tin Can
28-Jan-2016, 19:05
Photographers take photographs, the rest take snap shots. Remember that many crappy snap shots provided Kodak the R&D funds to make superior film products.


I heard, back in Peak film, that pros used way more film than amateurs.

I always thought that sounded odd, but perhaps not.

Anybody know the facts?

Harold_4074
28-Jan-2016, 19:38
Camera owners take pictures, photographers make pictures :)

macolive
28-Jan-2016, 19:40
Great clip! Thanks for sharing.

DrTang
29-Jan-2016, 09:15
the amount of money they spend on equipment





hahahahahhaha

j/k...sort of

Drew Wiley
29-Jan-2016, 09:16
Randy - maybe that applies to cumulative square inches or square footage of film and not just numbers of shots. There was a time when even 4x5 was considered
a standard portable pro format, and they could sure burn film! I still remember the mountain high pile of filmholders on my brother's countertop for just a single
assignment. That's how they were taught.

invisibleflash
29-Jan-2016, 09:32
Photographers take photographs, the rest take snap shots. Remember that many crappy snap shots provided Kodak the R&D funds to make superior film products.

Sure, without the camera fondlers the companies would go out of biz.

aluncrockford
30-Jan-2016, 15:48
I heard, back in Peak film, that pros used way more film than amateurs.

I always thought that sounded odd, but perhaps not.

Anybody know the facts?

We were always told that the amateur market subsidised the pros, yes we may well have used shed loads of largeformat 10x8 but the profit was to be had in 35mm, though interestlngly enough both Kodak and fuji sponsored the UK AFEAP heavily for years as the association of being a pro film manufacturer help give them credability in the amateur market

Two23
30-Jan-2016, 22:28
What I've come to think is that digital has removed the cost and dramatically sped up the process. The result has been a flood of perfectly sharp & exposed images, but they are poorly conceived and executed. People don't seem to be taking the time to think through a composition. On some of the gear oriented message boards the foundation of thinking seems to be, "If I get a really good camera, it will do everything for me." The result seems to be little effort put into composition. It's especially bad on the railfan forums I often haunt. I often say that any photo is about great use of Light, and really the train is at best secondary. I go on to say that a great photo less about what you SEE and more about what you FEEL. I mostly get either puzzled looks or replies that I'm a bit "nuts." Sometimes I get responses that are down right hostile.

One thing I've really learned from using vintage cameras, and especially shooting 4x5, is that the camera is the LEAST important thing to how interesting a photo is. I own a Nikon D800E with the very best lenses you can put on it, but some of my favorite and most compelling photos have been made with my 1904 Kodak Brownie No.2. It comes down to this for me: a "picture taker" takes photos, a photographer "makes" them.


Kent in SD

barnacle
31-Jan-2016, 01:07
The classic response to 'Nice photo, you must have a really good camera' is 'Nice dinner, you must have a really good oven'.

I've discovered over the years that the keepability of the image is inversely proportional to the cost/difficulty of the medium. When I use large format, most of what I take - down to the care and thought necessary to make the image in the first place - is if not earth shattering, at least worth keeping. As I move through medium format to 35mm I might get one or two on a roll; when I'm just bangin' away on an electric camera, meh, one in fifty or a hundred. I don't even bother with mobile phones; the device is such a ridiculous format to compose and shoot the image it's not worth bothering.

I should learn more discipline...

('Daddy, what's a camera?' 'Well, son, it's like a mobile phone that can't make calls.')

Neil

Sirius Glass
31-Jan-2016, 10:06
The classic response to 'Nice photo, you must have a really good camera' is 'Nice dinner, you must have a really good oven'.

Those are nice digital pix you took, you must have a good computer.

cowanw
31-Jan-2016, 10:57
I thought of this thread when I read this.
http://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2016/jan/30/sheer-nepotism-brooklyn-beckham-burberry-shoot-angers-photographers

I was amused particularly about the pro photographers complaining that the new guy hadn't put his time in.

"Burberry would have the entire setup ready so that all Brooklyn (Beckham) had to do was click the button.
He’s obviously not going to be doing the lighting, he’ll have no clue of the programmes, the cameras or Photoshop, ... “It’s going to be so well managed – he’ll have the best hair and makeup, the best models, the very best equipment, so that the chance of any risk is greatly reduced."