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General Photography
Photographing the "Why"
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<blockquote data-quote="jengajoh" data-source="post: 25208" data-attributes="member: 3536"><p>I agree. A good picture is a good picture, it doesn't matter what your settings were. You made that picture by yourself. You decided to press that shutter when and where you did and if it's a good shot no one can argue, no one can tell you its wrong. I guess they can but if you are happy with it, if it moves you then thats what makes it right, right?</p><p></p><p>I shoot in manual all the time, I use the light meter as my guide. I want to control the amount of light, and control as much as I can about the photo, not because it will be technically right but because I want it to look how I want it to look.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="jengajoh, post: 25208, member: 3536"] I agree. A good picture is a good picture, it doesn't matter what your settings were. You made that picture by yourself. You decided to press that shutter when and where you did and if it's a good shot no one can argue, no one can tell you its wrong. I guess they can but if you are happy with it, if it moves you then thats what makes it right, right? I shoot in manual all the time, I use the light meter as my guide. I want to control the amount of light, and control as much as I can about the photo, not because it will be technically right but because I want it to look how I want it to look. [/QUOTE]
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Photographing the "Why"
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