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Manfrotto 468MGRC0 Hydrostatic Ball Head

Despite the claims of some photography pundits, you certainly do need a stable shooting platform for your camera in many situations. OIS, IS and VR can't help you when shutter speeds drop to seconds.

Read Mario Georgiou's full review!

Canon PowerShot G9 Digital Camera

As good camera designs get better and the market leaders — Canon and Nikon mainly — vie for top spot, consumers, hobbyists, amateurs and professional photographers benefit from the competition. Is there a G9 in your future?

Read Howard Carson's full review!

Canon PowerShot A650 IS Digital Compact Camera

Canon keeps coming up with terrific little cameras which exceed our expectations. Looking for a digital compact camera packed with value, usability and image quality? Consider looking at Canon first.

Read Howard Carson's full review!

TrueGrain v1.1

There is an increasingly steady turn away from film and film effects of all types in favor of a completely digital look and feel. Emulation of classic film grain, a hallmark of so much great film over the years, has some interesting uses.

Read Mario Georgiou's full review!

The Adobe Photoshop Layers Book

With apologies to veteran Photoshop users who spend lots of time in the Channels palette, the Photoshop Layers features and functions are the most powerful photo editing controls available today. A serious Photoshop layers book is always welcome.

Read Mario Georgiou's full review!

Nikon Coolpix P50 Digital Camera

Point & Shoot cameras come and go with the seasons. The problem is, some consumers have limited budgets. What's needed is a sturdy little camera that has some staying power in the form of rich, accurate color, a sharp lens, and lots of features.

Read Howard Carson's full review!

Photography & Video Shoulder Bags, Sling Packs, Backpacks, Waist Belt Systems and Rolling Bags - 2008 Product Roundup

We rounded up samples, talked to users, shopped and reviewed models from 30 makers. There are a lot of good designs to choose from. Find the bag that fits your needs.

Read Howard Carson's full review!

Plustek OpticFilm 7300 Film Scanner

It doesn't matter how dedicated you've become to digital photography. There's still a great storehouse of photos on slides and negatives sitting in a closet, calling out to you. Those old photos aren't suddenly unworthy simply because they're not digital.

Read Mario Georgiou's full review!

Adobe Photoshop Lightroom v1.3

Professional photographers and serious amateurs need robust, easy to use software which eases workflow while at the same time providing powerful and intuitively easy to use editing tools, content management and high quality output. Adobe has answered the call.

Read Mario Georgiou's full review!

Nikon D300 Digital SLR Camera

Great companies stay at or near the top of the mountain by relentlessly and creatively pursuing the improvement of their core products. Focus, focus, focus. Nikon exemplifies this by periodically designing and manufacturing some of the best cameras in the world.

Read Howard Carson's full review!

Manfrotto 190XPROB Tripod

It's great to have the latest SLR camera and lens, but Pro or not, you'd also better have a reliable, versatile tripod

RAW Workflow from Capture to Archives

Digital photographers grappling with huge volumes of RAW files have to get into the habit of using an efficient workflow

Sunday, April 24, 2005

Art, Craft II - Overcoming the Wow Factor

I've been involved in digital imaging and graphics since the early 80's and have seen the trends and technologies from their earliest days. A lot of what I see in the way of "crimes" is based upon the "play" factor. Folks get a new toy and really want to have a little fun with it. They make several basic assumptions and start to throw features at their Photos till they in essence kill the image ... Call it a Cool or Wow factor. Hopefully as time goes by they temper that Wow response and start to actually learn something about the reason behind the existence of some of the features they are playing with and can refine their technique.

Think back to the early days of DTP when people started playing with hundreds of fonts on their pages. Talk about visual clutter ... some horrible Typographic crimes were committed in the name of DTP. Time eventually helped temper that impulse too, that and the fact that some people actually realized that having the tools didn't make you a designer.

I feel that with digital photography, the toys themselves provide an immediacy which classical photography doesn't reaaly have. It is this immediacy which betrays the art. In order for the user to learn they have to overcome the "wow" response and actually learn about the art itself. The art's history and traditions are something which these digital photographers will have to explore. This is as much true for photography as it was for the digital artist to learn how to draw and paint before they worked on a computer. It's not the tools that are important ... its the reasoning behind the use of the tools. Once this reasoning can be applied judiciously then the photographer will learn to appreciate the full scope of all the new options they have at their command. They can in effect capture, edit and output their images and do some justice to them.

You have to, in essence, show them the difference ... once they see the difference it opens up a whole new world to them and there's the rub, most folks really don't understand that vital difference the Art vs Craft. Learning the craft is difficult by itself and is a real journey in itself. The Art can really only be explored once you have enough of the craft under your belt to appreciate the possibilities. The Art is found in the expression and the application of the craft.

Photography as Art is about mastering the craft and creating images which match closely what is in your minds eye. Ansel Adams preached the concept of "Previsualisation" and it is as much about understanding your medium as it is about context.

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