Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/02/20
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]While you may say that you prefer the photographer who takes the photo in the camera to the one who make it in the darkroom, I hasten to inform you are dreaming if you think all the work can be done at the moment you snap the photo. It is the rare photo, that comes out of the camera without needs a little here and there. This is true in the digital and the wet darkroom. When you snap the photo, the process has only just begun. If the day is overcast, you have to deal with the lack of contrast. If you don't, you will have a flat photo. An awareness of how photos print will allow you to expose your photos better. Now I imagine you know that great Ansel Adams' photo of sunset over.... That photo could not be done the way it is without much work in the darkroom. The sky could not have been that dark to have gotten that exposure without the moon looking differently. I might add that even if one takes a perfect photo, one is dependant upon a lab to print it correctly. My experience has been that most labs are dreadful. If you find a good one, never let it go. I started to print my own photos in order to get the most out of my prints. First you take the photo. Then you have to print it and a good photo can be ruined through poor printing. If you are just a "shooter," that is someone who just shoots, I guess this doesn't matter. Photography can be more than just shooting, however. There is a place for skill in the field backed up by skill in the wet or digital darkroom. Cheers--Doug