Entries Tagged 'thoughts' ↓
June 25th, 2008 — thoughts
Yeah, I know… you missed me. I got just a little bit caught up over the last number of months (actually nearly a year) with a shiny new software development company.
Not very photography related but a bit digital anyway… must have been that ruby post that started it.
June 7th, 2007 — photoshop, opinion, thoughts
Adobe are getting a bit of flack lately over their software pricing policy, specifically the price difference between the US and Europe. It’s not without justification.
Take a look at this price comparison chart on amanwithapencil.com.
In the case of the latest release of Creative Studio Design Premium (CS3), there’s up to a 1000 dollars in the difference, between the UK and the US.
If you feel strongly about this, there’s a petition to the European Commission you can sign… there are already over 10,000 signatures.
I’m currently using a very old copy of Elements 2.0, which I got bundled with a scanner I bought a few years ago. As you can see in the post below; I’m not adverse to doing the odd digital composite or just generally playing around with the software… No doubt about it, Adobe make great software. Doing a full upgrade of my software to something a little more pro and up to date has been on the cards for a while now… but my wallet just can’t make it that far… especially when a new camera beckons…
So, will Adobe listen, and start playing fair…? Who knows? If they do, there’s a good chance that I’ll break open my piggy bank… and send a few euro their way.
May 16th, 2007 — thoughts
There is always a second oppourtunity to perfect the image you have taken with the camera. In the days of film, the development process was when the image was finally revealed. Pushing during development, dodging, burning and cropping amongst other tricks were all available to the photographer at that stage. In fact most of these terms have been transposed to the digital era.
I guess the reason I write this is because I find myself in a desperate bid to get together a set of images.
I’m sorting and cropping, dodging, changing colours and levels, sharpening and blurring, making mediocre shots look just that bit more appealing, maybe even something that bit special. This manipulation of the original image goes far beyond anything which could be done with negatives and an enlarger.
This provokes a thought; What does it make my images? They’re not what I had in mind when I took the picture, they have only been realised now, after the event of shutter release.
It seems faintly acceptable to me to alter and apply retrospective thought to the original to make it something other then what it was. At least, sometimes I believe this to be true, but I know that for the people I admire most in photography this idea would not be entertained.
In the words of Henri Cartier-Bresson;
The creative act lasts but a brief moment, a lightning instant of give-and-take, just long enough for you to level the camera and to trap the fleeting prey in your little box.
He found beauty in “things as they are”. I doubt somehow if he would be pleased.