I'm not sure if this has been discussed before or not, but IMHO Photoshop is cheating.
I sense that some disagree with me so I thought I'd start a thread and see where it goes... (if anywhere :clown
Why do I think it's cheating?
Because photography is about capturing a moment using skill and knowledge to get the perfect depth of field, composition, and quality of picture as you stand there taking it IMO. To me, photoshopped photographs no longer remain photographs and change instead to Art.
For example (and I mean no disrespect to Sharky by referring to his post, it's just that it's a good example of what I'm trying to say), in this post:
http://www.cliosport.net/forum/show...oshop-thread&p=8527829&viewfull=1#post8527829
Sharky changes what is a half-decent photograph into a picture that could arguably be described as 'better' because it is more interesting, more eye catching, and more pleasing to the eye overall. But is it photography? The first image is, yes. The second image? No, not in my eyes.
Again, with no disrespect to Sharky, to achieve the effect he produced in the second image he could have used a CPL filter to darken the sky on the original, which could also have reduced reflections on the car and windows and made it stand out a bit more. The saturation could have been increased slightly in-camera so that the colours had that bit more vibrancy that he was looking for, and he could have centre-weighted the exposure so the camera metered off the bright car and perhaps reduced the exposure time a little, which may have meant a darker landscape and the car standing out a bit more. If vignetting was the desired result another, a wide circular graduated filter could have been used.
Photoshopping the first image to achieve the second image is still impressive, I couldn't do it, but taking a photograph and getting the second image on-camera is photography to me, whereas processing the first image to get to the second image on a computer is art - the end result is nice, but it's not the same as photography skills.
This is all IMHO of course, and Sharky is just an example and I mean no disrespect to him, and I accept that darkroom operators historically used processing techniques to achieve desired results rather than just printing the straight negative, and that some other images (like Scott's stunning beach images in that thread) would simply not be possible without post-processing, but, personally speaking, I think a photographer that can achieve the second image on-camera is a better photographer than one that can take the first image and transform it into the second image. The latter would be an artist.
Thoughts?
I sense that some disagree with me so I thought I'd start a thread and see where it goes... (if anywhere :clown
Why do I think it's cheating?
Because photography is about capturing a moment using skill and knowledge to get the perfect depth of field, composition, and quality of picture as you stand there taking it IMO. To me, photoshopped photographs no longer remain photographs and change instead to Art.
For example (and I mean no disrespect to Sharky by referring to his post, it's just that it's a good example of what I'm trying to say), in this post:
http://www.cliosport.net/forum/show...oshop-thread&p=8527829&viewfull=1#post8527829
Sharky changes what is a half-decent photograph into a picture that could arguably be described as 'better' because it is more interesting, more eye catching, and more pleasing to the eye overall. But is it photography? The first image is, yes. The second image? No, not in my eyes.
Again, with no disrespect to Sharky, to achieve the effect he produced in the second image he could have used a CPL filter to darken the sky on the original, which could also have reduced reflections on the car and windows and made it stand out a bit more. The saturation could have been increased slightly in-camera so that the colours had that bit more vibrancy that he was looking for, and he could have centre-weighted the exposure so the camera metered off the bright car and perhaps reduced the exposure time a little, which may have meant a darker landscape and the car standing out a bit more. If vignetting was the desired result another, a wide circular graduated filter could have been used.
Photoshopping the first image to achieve the second image is still impressive, I couldn't do it, but taking a photograph and getting the second image on-camera is photography to me, whereas processing the first image to get to the second image on a computer is art - the end result is nice, but it's not the same as photography skills.
This is all IMHO of course, and Sharky is just an example and I mean no disrespect to him, and I accept that darkroom operators historically used processing techniques to achieve desired results rather than just printing the straight negative, and that some other images (like Scott's stunning beach images in that thread) would simply not be possible without post-processing, but, personally speaking, I think a photographer that can achieve the second image on-camera is a better photographer than one that can take the first image and transform it into the second image. The latter would be an artist.
Thoughts?