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To Photoshop or Not to Photoshop...
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<blockquote data-quote="DraganDL" data-source="post: 797431" data-attributes="member: 18251"><p>To photoshop, that is the answer, now. Before, you had to add/deduct a little light by keeping your hands or cardboard masks between the lens of your <span style="color: #2D2D2D"><span style="font-family: 'Arial'">Paterson Universal Enlarger and a photo paper in a darkroom, to apply some vignetting, to correct the overexposure/underexposure...and/or to place two sheets of developed negative film one onto another in order to produce "sandwich" photograph (focus/HDR/ etc. stacking). Nowadays this is done with pshop... As for the lion "chasing" antelope, the good result should not require any captions (it's like the motto of the literature fiction : believe it - it COULD have happened).</span></span></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DraganDL, post: 797431, member: 18251"] To photoshop, that is the answer, now. Before, you had to add/deduct a little light by keeping your hands or cardboard masks between the lens of your [COLOR=#2D2D2D][FONT=Arial]Paterson Universal Enlarger and a photo paper in a darkroom, to apply some vignetting, to correct the overexposure/underexposure...and/or to place two sheets of developed negative film one onto another in order to produce "sandwich" photograph (focus/HDR/ etc. stacking). Nowadays this is done with pshop... As for the lion "chasing" antelope, the good result should not require any captions (it's like the motto of the literature fiction : believe it - it COULD have happened).[/FONT][/COLOR] [/QUOTE]
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