Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/03/20
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]B. D. Colen offered: > And for all the talk of the decisive moment, he shot like a machine gun, > and > really worked his scenes. Eugene Richards tells the story of first being > voted into Magnum, and immediately heading for the filing cabinets that > held > HCB contact sheets. He said he was amazed at what a prolific shooter HCB > > was- shot after shot after shot after shot of the same subject, worked > from > every conceivable angle.<<<<<<<<<<, Hi B.D., As you know it's called milk it, work it, shoot every and anything you can find an angle on it while you're doing it, simply because you can't do it on the light table or contact sheet later! So many people think HCB was such an incredible "deceive moment one frame only" shooter and that was it! It's crock, he worked every situation for everything he could milk from it simply because that's what being a photojournalist is all about! Regardless of what some people may think! As Eugene Richards says... "he was amazed at what a prolific shooter >HCB was- shot after shot after shot after shot of the same subject, worked >from every conceivable angle.<<< That's no different than a writer who begins to write a book, they don't think they're going to use X-number of words or pages, they start to write and eventually they have written a book! Artist's are the same, they don't think about how many brushes they'll use nor tubes of paint, they just do it. That's why shooting any documentary or situation, one doesn't think about how many rolls or frames, you keep on shooting until you've taken every bit of imagery out of the scene/situation you are motivated by. Even shooting hundreds of rolls in a week or two on some assignments it rarely was considered a complete and perfect shoot! Because when you looked at the contact sheets you always saw something you missed or could have shot from a different angle. HCB wasn't any different! ted