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Do you Crop ?


Findus

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You are on the east bank of the Mississippi. You are carrying your m6 and 35mm lens. On the other side you spy Elvis and Hitler, each naked, sunbathing. Elvis is rubbing sun lotion on Amelia Earhart's back. Do you shoot and crop or pass on the photo?

 

Swim to within range with your Nikonos!:D

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Guest stnami

Stay home and doctor a photo in PhotoShop and add and add yourself in the photo drinking bourban dressed as a goat

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Back to the original question:

 

All the time with digital. But bizarrely enough I am reluctant to crop a scanned neg. Somehow it seems sacrilegious to cut off any of that lovely analogue fuzziness around the frame. Yes, I know you can replicate it in PhotoShop, but it's not the same.

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It's all a matter of taste.

 

Just because an image has been cropped doesn't make it any worse than one that hasn't. The only disadvantage is that you are not making full use of the original to make the final result.

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Yes, I crop. Extensively.

 

Staying with the original framing is honorable. Some people, including famous ones like Avedon were/are very proud of it but for other than for slide images it is not really necessary. And rather restrictive too.

 

Just my opinion.

 

Willy

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I think my Grandmother was Laponish..

 

Photography is a changing art form.

I prefer to lag behind and create my photographs with my own skills, given lighting conditions, etc.

 

Besides being part-Laponish, I am stubborn.

 

darlene :)

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I find it interesting that my cropping habits have changed a lot since I started using rangefinder cameras last year; for the twenty or so years of my photographic experience before that, I had always used SLRs (both film and digital); with SLRs I found myself cropping quite frequently to improve composition. Since I started using an M6 as my main camera I crop far less.

 

I think this is because I find it much easier to crop in camera using a rangefinder, where more of the scene is visible outside the framelines. In particular, I seem to get my horizons and verticals right with an RF!

 

Having said all that, I do not have any ethical aversion to cropping where necessary, especially where the ideal composition does not fit the film format, where it was not possible to get the exact shot I wanted with the equipment to hand at the time, or simply where I didn't get it quite right but can still salvage a good photograph.

 

All the best,

 

Dan

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It depends largely on the format. I tend to compose rather tightly when using a SLR. That would be impractical with a rangefinder as the framing is unavoidable much vaguer what with focal lengths without framelines, parralex, lenses blocking the finder, etc, etc. My tendency is to take a step back to make sure I dont cut off part of my composition. I'm much more careful with any kind of direct view situation, even a back of the camera LCD point n' shoot.

 

Rex

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