Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2001/08/23
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Dave writes: > Over the past few months I've seen some amazing > work done in Photoshop by various photographers. > Most recently, some fine art 5x7 prints of images > taken of Paris that were toned various shades of > yellows and redbrowns. They were absolutely > stunning. Impossible to do in a wet darkroom. You can do far more in Photoshop than you could ever dream of doing in a chemical darkroom; but the tendency for newbies to Photoshop is to go hog-wild and apply ever filter and tool in the program, transforming nice photos into wild abstract junk that has a distinctly high-school look to it (because the major offenders in this domain tend to be high-school boys). Moderation is very important in Photoshop. > There's little value in a latent image. The real > objective in photography should be presenting an > end product somehow, somewhere. My goal in photography is to produce an end product that looks exactly like what I saw when I took the photo. The challenge for me is to get from what I see to a paper copy or a displayed image that looks like what I saw. Photoshop is one of the tools I use to that end. But it is very rare for me to modify any photo to make it look like something I did _not_ see when I took the photo.