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Photography Q&A
Culling
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<blockquote data-quote="Stoshowicz" data-source="post: 585369" data-attributes="member: 31397"><p>My thing is to , after the first quickie round , survey any group of photos which pertains to a scene or subject by itself. For instance if I had ten decent shots of a player bringing the ball up the field , Id pick one of those ten to process , and only do another if I wasn't really keen on the first after developing it. After representing all the players , dramatic or pivotal events I'd dump some of the ones that did make it to processing, so there would be <em>some</em> waste,, I just feel more comfortable not being too abrupt about dumping. (I can go through about 500 shots in an evening, keeping 30, but don't know if you'd still call that too labor intensive.)</p><p>What really slows me down is that I keep photos for different reasons, rather than just cull to serve a single end.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Stoshowicz, post: 585369, member: 31397"] My thing is to , after the first quickie round , survey any group of photos which pertains to a scene or subject by itself. For instance if I had ten decent shots of a player bringing the ball up the field , Id pick one of those ten to process , and only do another if I wasn't really keen on the first after developing it. After representing all the players , dramatic or pivotal events I'd dump some of the ones that did make it to processing, so there would be [I]some[/I] waste,, I just feel more comfortable not being too abrupt about dumping. (I can go through about 500 shots in an evening, keeping 30, but don't know if you'd still call that too labor intensive.) What really slows me down is that I keep photos for different reasons, rather than just cull to serve a single end. [/QUOTE]
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