Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/03/07
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]>It's interesting how we seem to have gotten really hung up on the size of >photographic prints. I know I'm in a real minority, but I find that smaller >prints with a fair amount of white space around them really draw me >in...Large prints can be nice, but I simply don't find them >necessary.....This has nothing to do, however, with whether the Evans show >is or isn't any good...I haven't seen it yet but hope to... b.d., i agree with you on the issue of size and white space with respect to photographic prints. it's not that i don't like large prints, i just find them harder to deal with as a viewer/spectator: as if it were more difficult to take the whole thing in. it's nice to let the image breathe a bit in the white space of the borders, and allow the proportions of the photographic space to resonate with those of the paper. when i print i tend to leave a fairly substantial border around the image - foolish, perhaps, or wasteful, cause one can always add white space if one has one's prints mounted; i don't. or at least, i haven't yet. i'll generally print up to 4"x6" on an 8"x10" sheet, 7"x10 1/2" on an 11"x14". for about the last year, i've been working on one set of images that i print 2"x3" on 5"x7" sheets, and even they need that bit of white around them. more than just for reasons of white space, however, i find that certain prints seem more appropriate at this or that size; in other words, the size of the print may (perhaps even should) be motivated by the 'content' of the image. rather than just print everything out at x size, that decision might very well be dictated by other (esthetic, practical, or what-have-you) reasons. this kind of thing interests me because it basically means more than just the 'subject matter' of the image is being used to communicate to the viewer. and i'm not necessarily talking about 'presentation' (i.e. mounting, framing, etc.), which is a whole other thing and essentially external (and, in my opinion, ultimately unnecessary). so, there may be very good reasons why those persian miniatures are miniatures: perhaps they were meant to convey man's smallness in the world, or maybe paper and colors were too expensive to squander in unnecessarily huge images, who knows. the point, for me at any rate, can be summed up in the following paradoxical clichés: regarding the photographic print, 'size does matter' and 'small is beautiful.' what ho! guy