"Charlotte" looks like she just stepped out of Helmut Newton's "They Are Coming" image!
"Charlotte" looks like she just stepped out of Helmut Newton's "They Are Coming" image!
Looking at both images on the previous page (204) brings to mind a question I have had but haven't really looked for an answer - is there a "rule", or guideline for cropping body parts off, namely arms and legs? Is it better to crop at the joints (knees and elbows) or between the joints?
This is the rule what I was taught by my figure drawing teacher at art school.
I was also told on this forum that rules are for Neophytes who don't know what they are doing.
I'll go along with what Emil is telling you. Of course all rules can be broken at one time or another. You have to decide when it works.
The standard in the trades (machinists and such) is:
The Apprentice learns the rules
The Journeyman follows the rules.
The Master writes the rules.
- Leigh
Last edited by Leigh; 22-Mar-2013 at 16:43. Reason: misspoke... novice should have been apprentice
If you believe you can, or you believe you can't... you're right.
For me, the crop Ed used works very well. Flash's crop is a tad, I don't know...distracting...uneasy...unnatural? Makes me think that if you are going to crop that far down the legs, may as well of shown the feet.
Or is it just that I am into feet![]()
The photograph with the cropped feet felt unnatural to me too, Randy.
Well, I guess that would make me a journeyman photographer but a novice large format photographer.
I was a journeyman sheet metal worker but it didn't really matter. All of us followed the bosses' rules or you were down the road. Every shop had it's owner and a different set of rules.![]()
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