Second. I know David Hobby put his finger right on the pulse of photography in 2007 when his blog, Strobist.com, identified the style of using small, battery operated lights in lieu of bigger "plug in the wall" lights to do many routine photos. His blog is really great and it's helped many a photographer gain a degree of competence they otherwise would not have had. My book, Minimalist Lighting: Professional Techniques on Location certainly benefitted from the the surge of popularity but, enough is enough! Not every photo needs a flash in mandatory attendance. Not every photo benefits from "just a little bit of fill", "just a little bit of rim lighting...." In fact, half the images I see on the Flickr photostreams would benefit from a lot less lighting and more attention being paid to the light God already conjured up for the taking.
By the same token, not every scene can be lit only with the little dinky light poppers. On a fast paced commercial shoot you'd go nuts waiting for the little darlings to recycle. Especially if your set and client calls for the high production quality of low ISO's and smaller f-stops. If you expect a shoot to progress at a good pace, provide enough juice to slam out f 11 several hundred times, etc. you'll want something that plugs in the wall and goes, "pop, pop, pop" without overheating or giving you variable exposures. OMG, there might actually be a reason why all those pros use big heavy equipment-------beyond the cool logos on the product!!!
It's one of those "right tool for the right job" things. Like using a truck to haul a bunch of cinder blocks instead of the back seat of your Prius...... Like bringing a bigger gun to a knife fight. Or some silly metaphor meant to illustrate the advantages of correct gear choice.
While I'm ranting about equipment I'm going to throw this one into the mix: Everyone who is not working for clients who routinely use images in large, glossy print publications or displays and who is constantly buying new and improved digital cameras is being played for a chump. Before you spend another cent on new cameras do this experiment: Take 20,000 of your images from the last 10 years of digital shooting, shove them all into Lightroom and start looking at them on a 30 inch, calibrated monitor. Here's what I found: Cameras improved relentlessly until they hit six megapixels around 2002. At that point any improvement of the images used at under 8x10 @ 300 dpi is invisible. My Nikon D100, D1X and Kodak DCS 760, when used at their base ISO's are equal to any Canon or Nikon camera currently on the market.
I can't argue for a second that the newer cameras are not much better at higher ISO's than the ones I've listed but from a professional point of view I find the high ISO performance meaningless in most of the applications where we make most of our money. Your mileage may vary according to your specialty. For a studio portrait photographer I can count on my fingers the number of times I've needed to turn off the studio lights, put down the external light meter and use ISO 3200. Just doesn't happen.
And there is no real link between price and quality. Not anymore. I find the quality of the files from my Sony R1's equal to the files of the D700 at the native ISO's of each camera. But more importantly is how well they print. Most stuff looks interesting on the screen but the real test is how it handles paper. And vice versa. Wanna improve your digital photography? Use a tripod. Use the optimum apertures of your prime lenses. Work on finding more interesting subject matter. But exhaust all other avenues before you feel like you need to pony up for the new uber camera.
Final rant: If you are a runner have you ever really wanted to run on a bright sunny afternoon and you headed to a hiking trail in your city to burn some energy only to be confronted by hordes of amateur trail users who walk with strollers in groups that span the whole pathway? What the hell is wrong with these people. When they drive in their cars they are required to drive up one side of the road and down the other. Why do they become so mentally challenged when confronted with a hiking trails. Let's get some traffic control people out there ticketing these idiots so that people who want to run can do so in appropriate traffic patterns. Darn, that is so aggravating.
Kirk,
ReplyDeleteGlad I'm not the only one that feels that way on the trails. I especially like the ones that go "hiking" in high heels...
I miss living in NM, the trails there were usually vacant.
Ed
Fantastic post Kirk. I'm in complete agreement about the newest uber cameras.
ReplyDeleteI like your rants, but I think they would be better if you had photos in them, like Joe McNally. Even if they're not related photos, it still gives the eye something to look at - eye candy.
ReplyDeleteBut keep up the rants. Loved the one about mandatory flash usage. I remember seeing a video somewhere, the guy showed a bunch of strobed shots, then the last one showed light streaming in from a high church window. He said "this one used the Light of the Lord."
Pretty cool.
I came to this post late, but late is better than never. This post struck a particular chord with me. I have just recently transitioned from film to digital and I have found that I have spent so much time trying to become technically perfect with the digital camera that I have created a collection of crap instead of compelling images.
ReplyDeleteI am also the world's worst at thinking I need something more. Thank you for the gentle nudge (kick in the ass) to compel me to go back to shooting images and stop thinking I need the latest and greatest thingy.
Hey, you mention doing that test in lightroom. But in my experience, lightroom tends to smear detail as compared to any manufactuer's own raw converter. For the record I've examined this on both my D300 and sony A700. Any thoughts?
ReplyDeleteI can't speak from a runner's standpoint, but I do live in Charleston, South Carolina. Right in the middle of Downtown. And so often I want to walk down to buy a pair of shoes or a shirt or some pens from my favorite art store and for some reason, some known-only-to-God reason, the tourists here (and don't get me wrong, I don't mind tourism, after all I'm a tourist in another city at least once or twice a year and because the tourists are apparently, according to the city, what keeps this city going, and what keep the prices going up, but that's not what I'm driving at) insist on walking four-across and 3-deep on the sidewalk.
ReplyDeleteThey're like some tourist dam that continues with the flow of the river to prevent anything from getting down stream before it does. And they stop and meander about the entrance of a store like cattle before being shooed into their paddock. And then they're gone and grazing happily on bobbles and treasures set out and priced-up specifically for their foreign-money-pleasure. And the river flows smoothly again. Until the next group, taking photos of that damn Riviera Theater sign stops up the flow of the river. Again.
Maybe they should make tourist lanes on the sidewalk and mommy lanes on the runner trails. Like slow lanes and fast lanes on the interstate.