dSLR does not equal professional photographer.
B&W is a type of picture that you specifically compose to- NOT a FILTER on photoshop.
Holga is a type of camera with a very artistic value to it- NOT a BOX you click on photoshop.
Oh yeah, and photoshop is to help fix small imperfections and minor adjustments NOT a compensation because you suck at photos.
So why the ridiculous hate? Well see I've had a lot of people that I am connected to get married in the last year or two, as such everybody posts all these photos online - via FB or blog or flckr or you-name-it. Then I see other people gushing about how awesome they are and how they're the best wedding photographer in the world, etc. ad infinitum. This is fine and all, until I start seeing how crappy this stuff is and how much of it is 20 something girls that daddy bought them a camera and they have a macbook Pro so they can charge an arm and a leg and then take these senseless photos, add B&W effects or add a Holga Vignetting and say it's art. It's NOT!!!
I'm not a great photographer, and I don't really like/do well with wedding pictures, but that being said I'm not charging thousands of dollars either. I have shot a total of 3 (?) weddings and I have never done any of it as a pro. It was always as a favor or as an honor to be able to take some pictures for a friends wedding. That being said I am insulted as an enthusiast and friend of multiple professional photographers when I see the crap that is put on FB and flckr. Really you took the dumbest photo and then not only did you make it black and white but then you included the color one so that everyone knows that it's not really a B&W, or maybe you included both the B&W and the sepia tone wash - dear stupid do you even know what a sepia wash is? or how it's done??? (besides the obvious, "Well I click here and it does it- ta da!!")
To me black and white is the best looking form of art there is (now I know I am wrong, but this is my opinion). And to see it corrupted by idiots makes me sick. Think of it this way - most professionals spend years shooting Black and White heck some of them never leave it, but I guarantee you that all of them know how to shoot it. Furthermore, every person who takes a real photo class starts in B&W. This is where you learn the fundamentals, this is where you learn how a darkroom works, keys, tones, pushing, pulling, etc. you learn how to really take a good picture and yet somehow the lack of people knowing the basics seems to make them pros and leads to crap for photos.
If I offended you well I hope you can look past it, if you're really offended lemme know (not that I will do much about it, but maybe we can talk and I can show you what I mean). Otherwise always ask to see a professional's film cameras to know how they're digital stuff is.
Trust me a $500 dSLR is not a camera that you want as the main camera for your wedding- the sensor is too small and it may be 60 megapixels but that number means next to nothing- I know 6MP cameras that outshoot nearly everything else there is.
Chris
3 comments:
As someone getting into the world of wedding photography, I can honestly say - about 90% of wedding photography out there make me want to gag. Stiff, posed photos with little to no thought to composition or framing. Ugh.
The worst? Flat black and white photos where they do that cutesy "color splash" so only the bride's bouquet is in color. Really, if you need to resort to that "technique" to draw attention to the focal point of the photo, you shouldn't be taking anyone's money for it.
If only more people had a more discerning taste for photography, it wouldn't even be an issue. I had to rescue my older sister from a shitty photographer who was charging her way too much for posed, bland photos. Found an actual good photographer for the same price, thankfully.
There is a world of difference between shooting for color and for black and white photos. I wish more people would learn the hard way.
Amen. As my father-in-law said the other day "anyone can take good photos with one of those new cameras these days". After being slightly offended (myself being an olympus toting, lightroom using amateur), I realized he was right. Anyone can take a decent picture with a low grade SLR. But it takes a real photographer to take a stellar picture and make it into art.
and that's not saying that I am or ever will be a real photographer nor will I be charging for my attempts at the art.
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