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Cruddlies! A Cropping Conundrum...
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<blockquote data-quote="Billy Y." data-source="post: 170667" data-attributes="member: 10157"><p>When I was in photo school, for the first 2 months it was mandatory that we set up every shot with a tripod. The idea was that you would spend more time thinking about the composition before you took the photo. The problem with "high ISO performance, fast lenses with VR, and unlimited cropping on the computer" is you can hand hold a lot of shots and click before your really think it through. I find myself doing it all the time now, which used to annoy me (plus it was a lot more difficult to crop your negative). </p><p> My point is, it seems like you put time into composing the shot in the first place, don't over think it in the digital darkroom - I agree with Kodiak, the original shot is very nice</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Billy Y., post: 170667, member: 10157"] When I was in photo school, for the first 2 months it was mandatory that we set up every shot with a tripod. The idea was that you would spend more time thinking about the composition before you took the photo. The problem with "high ISO performance, fast lenses with VR, and unlimited cropping on the computer" is you can hand hold a lot of shots and click before your really think it through. I find myself doing it all the time now, which used to annoy me (plus it was a lot more difficult to crop your negative). My point is, it seems like you put time into composing the shot in the first place, don't over think it in the digital darkroom - I agree with Kodiak, the original shot is very nice [/QUOTE]
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Cruddlies! A Cropping Conundrum...
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