But by your argument, he is good then? Since all this leaps in digital technology negates skill, knowledge, and artistry.
Sure RAW helps a total amateur take a decent looking still, but it's not going to create a legion of masters.
For those of you who want read more about VK's chart, the documentary filmmaker Errol Morris wrote a great 5 part article about the topic a few years ago for the New York Times.
http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/06/20/the-anosognosics-dilemma-1/
my argument from the start has nothing to do with being "good" VK titled this topic. My argument is that RAW is making is possible for ANYBODY to do it, and make in convincing.
and I do not disagree with the chart VK posted. I very much agree with it.
@gravitatemediagroup Ah ok, I misunderstood. Totally agree with that premise!
@sph1nxster how on earth did you get that from what I said? lol there have been photographers, and now there are more photographers than ever, among those photographers will be village idiots, and with the help of technology/RAW, those village idiots can blend in better with the "professionals"
30 years ago, a photographer would have had to make sure the lighting is perfect, the exposure is perfect, the focus is dialed in, and on and on and on.
now, you can buy a camera, set it to auto everything, RAW, and adjust the rest in post. Folks, I hate it just as much as anybody else, but it's real. I know it's real because I've been doing it since I owned my first DSLR. Although I still don't call myself a photographer, I like to take photos, good or bad is a matter of opinion. By my own experimenting, I can see how it would be EXTREMELY easy for somebody to jump in and say "I'm a photographer"
I will also be the first to admit that a real photographer doesn't need the help of RAW, or a $10k camera. http://www.iphoneography.com/
now, you can buy a camera, set it to auto everything, RAW, and adjust the rest in post.
What? You adjust aperture and shutter speed using raw? Can you teach me how?
@vitaliy_kiselev I know 2 years old that can work an iPad, I'm sure if the lighting wasn't right, one could figure out how to fix it (if needed) in a specific situation.
although, I have brought a pitch black shot back to life, and a really blown out shot, back to normal.
I alked specific thing, do not slide to "fix exposition".
slide to fix? isn't that what RAW is for. adjusting and fixing?
I'm way late to this crazy discussion, but after watching the workflow demonstrated over at Cheesycam for the BMCC, I really saw great potential there. I also immediately thought of all the harddrives I was going to have to buy.
But seriously, photography is an art form. My wife is a terrific photographer and has been paid for her work. But she is not a technical guru, rather, one that can frame and make the choices of an artist.
When I shoot documentaries, I find myself making "safe" decisions over potentially artful ones. When you interview someone, you might, and often do, have one shot at it. As the DP, you are forced to take the ego out of it and get the cleanest shot framed very simply (I follow the old rule of thirds as best I can).
If you're capturing live events, like weddings, it is all about capturing the moment. And I'll bet that any wedding videographer worth his salt would be running multiple cameras and probably have a safety cam out there.
When I cut a Red feature for a guy last year, I was amazed how flexible the footage was in post. This enabled me to fix problems. We graded very little.
These days, I find myself amazed how much better footage I get out of my two old GH1s that have been hacked than out of my HMC150. In fact, I'm going to sell my HMC150, and probably buy a GH3. These days, I'm using FCPX, and I have the plugins from Crumplepop (the awesome Finisher is a must), and others that I picked up here and there. I'm fixing white balance better than ever before, smoothing skin in complex ways that looks natural, and adjusting color without having to use any other program. Now, this might not work for everyone, but I can't imagine the average viewer would complain.
Raw is just a tool, the art is where the money is.
I agree, I just sold my ac130 to look for a camera with more flexibility in post, and the BMCC was it.
And yes, a real wedding videographer is running multiple cameras.
@GravitateMediagroup I see why you say everybody can be a photographer (PS: Wix, or any free medium to make a website are not to be taken serius, in my world, unless it's some CMS like Cargocollective)
imo the framing on nearly all your photos are somewhat off, some are cropped as i can see, which means you just shoot, and do 99% in post, just some feedback not to be taken as a insult.
Photography is not simply pressing a button and shit is done, well photographers use a concept, a general style, a lighting style (if present), use models, and photographers are nearly all directors since their the driving artistic people behind photos, it is the photographer that can capture a story in 1 frame, and this is something you can not fix in photoshop.
the "snapping" generation just points and shoot, this has nothing to do with photography, imo if anyone can do it, then why do some people get hired to do portraits of certain people, this is not because they 'have raw', think about it.
I also have to add that lens choice, Manual or Automatic, Color pallette (studio work) or exterior work, f-stop choice, printing and all other things are also a point that will make you more '[pro]'
There's a lot of different aspects to producing photos, and being paid, having fans, publicity, living the life of an artist, all of these things enjoy an uneasy, interdependent relationship. Oftentimes, a corporate client will pick the photographer from the bid pool who looks the most corporate, and frame their high-priced piece of junk in the ugly, corporate lobby. . Other clients from Corporate are extremely savvy and amateur photographers who "like Leica". Is it art? Who knows? Even in a museum, people can't tell.
Being a paid professional photographer may be nice work if you can get it (it can be a real hassle, too) but it doesn't mean one is an artist. Most commercial work is recording adverts, events, families and corporate presentations, plus books, magazines, and so on. National Geographic often has amazing photos, but it also isn't always considered art--probably because there simply is too much of it. It's too good, and the artistic voice is lost in a sea of excellence.
Everybody sees different things. Take the two young ladies on the motorcycle. I just jotted down the first things I noticed in the first five seconds: 1. The type compositor was very careful with the spacing of all the letters, but forgot to kern the apostrophe in "Tayor' s style". That's the first thing I noticed. 2. The faces look yellow and have shadows. That may be a look, but for me it was initially engaging but then distracting. The smile on the passenger is not as good as the driver's smile. 3. There are scratches on the exhaust pipe, indicating that the bike has been dropped, but no scratches on the engine case, which is highly polished. That created a level of dissonance that made me think that it wasn't somehow a "right bike". That led me to look at the shocks, which are junk. Then I wondered, the Triumph is classy bike, why not get one that is set up right? It could have been more cool, bike-wise.
I think if you asked 100 ppl what their impressions were, you would get 100 different answers. That's the nature of art. Some people would really like the motorcycle, others would think it isn't a "real" Triumph and would have preferred a Norton anyway, some ppl would think the smiles were perfect and liked the warmth of the yellow color.
Technically minded people--and I'm technically minded but I throw all that away when I'm working, unfortunately--might complain about the fact that the focus is not dead on. Others might say they liked the fact the focus was "soft". Others might say that the specular reflections lacked character.
The question I would ask myself, is: did I take a similar picture that was better? And for me, the answer is, no, motorcycle wise, this one has me beat. Maybe what is missing from the dialog is elements of acknowledgment--hey, I might pick at a few things, but great photo. And then stop yourself from asking what camera (or phone) was used.
Would RAW improve the photo? Maybe, but it is only one element. You could swap out the shocks using Photoshop. That isn't "raw" but most photos are photoshopped.
@sicovdplas i'm not a photographer...for the 10th time, and I use wix as my flickr pretty much.
crop is a tool provided, it's a tool I use at my disposal, because it's MY choice to do so. There is no such thing as "perfect framing" as most professional photographers will tell you there is no such thing as a perfect photo, just as all scientist will tell you there is no such thing as a perfect circle (or has this changed?) lol what doesn't "look good" to you may look "amazing" to someone else. A photo has no rules, no guidelines, just as art can be a bunch of paint slapped onto a canvas with no intention of it to look like anything.
although, I would like to know which pics you find the framing to be "somewhat off" on.... there are maybe, 3 or 4 pics that have been cropped, and it wasn't because I had to, it's because TO ME, it made them look better.
All, really, all you are saying is 'You can fix it in the post'. You get kicked off every serious film or video set if you wouldn't care about getting exposure or whatever perfectly right ON SET whether it's recorded raw or not. You'd be kicked out - and you'd deserve it so. But that isn't even the problem - that's just the technical stuff. The problem I have with you is that you're using the phrase 'photographer' as it is something you don't need any creative skills, talent and years of experience to become someone who can REALLY call himsself 'photographer'.
You have just no respect for that word and everything it means. I don't give a shit about your raw-excitement, just pay some respect for those who really deserve calling themselves photographer.
there are multiple styles of photography.....
BUT!!!!! With RAW....You CAN! fix it in post.......is this false? If it's false, tell me why there is such a HUGE push for RAW video right now?
"our camera operator screwed this shot up, but thankfully we shot in RAW"
photography and creativity....yeah, you need it. skill? so a creative person with only 6 months of owning a camera absolutely CAN NOT achieve an = or better photograph than somebody with "years of experience" ?
the definition of Photographer as Webster sees it.
no mention of years of skills & knowledge, just simply "practices"
and although I practice taking pictures, I wouldn't dare call myself a photographer, but guess what Joe Blow up the Road just bought a DSLR and is going into business next week to call himself a photographer, good or not. if he can pull of the illusion with the help of raw & photoshop that he is a good photographer, and is getting paid for it...what does that mean?
Completely useless tallking to you.
what you are not understanding I guess is....i'm not disagreeing with anything you said.
i really haven't disagreed with anything anybody has said. but 90% of the responses are defensive like somebody has "stole their craft" because In reality, its happening, EVERYDAY. I'm fully aware the a GOOD photographer has years of experience, I'm also fully aware that it's easy to manipulate "THE AVERAGE CUSTOMER" into thinking an amateur is a pro. Would anybody that post on P-V be fooled by an amateur? no, because we are all camera/photo/video geeks for the most part.
You know, I need to revise my comment about "art is where the money is." That totally just popped into my mind and I typed it. The point that I was trying to make isn't that art equals money, but that to be successful on any level, you probably need to know more than how to use the tools.
And that being said, I'm way too technical to shoot photos nearly as good as the ones my wife shoots. And I understand the technical parts of the camera much better than she does.
Also, for most of my little work, Raw is not necessary. I can't imagine that workflow for a little local commercial.
I have shot a "little local commercial" for my wifes fathers business, and there was nothing wrong with the workflow. the workflow isn't near as complicated as people have made it out to be. The beauty is, you don't HAVE to shoot raw if you don't want.
read my comment above your last post....it is understood that experience is better, but with the help of technology, so called "amateurs" are becoming "experienced" at a faster rate.
You, Sir, said in fat letters :"With raw photography...ANYBODY can be a photographer." You could as well walk up to a true photographer and spit in his face. You are spitting in every photographer's face by saying such shit. THAT is what you just don't get. You just keep talking...
My personal view is:
From the inside, this is, self-opinion, it works pretty much as the curve Dunning-Kruger effect describes if you're a proffessional. It has for me at least. So RAW giving you more options ain't different from JPEG's or old SLRs, anyone with them would think "I'm the best" at the beggining. People in Instragam believe they're good photographers. It's bullshit. If you don't win money you're not proffesional, if you don't learn the tool and make experiments with it, what the etymology of the word photography tells us it is (light drawing or writing), then you're not even a poor street artist.
From the outside, the opinion the rest have about you, everyone believes they have a good, critical eye. So, everyone says "hey what a nice picture!" once you have stupid colors, good composition in a photograph of a lighter or a cigarette, or you captured a good moment, doesn't matter what happened with the light or the composition. One of those is MORE than enough to have lots of followers, you just need to have a lot of friends, or know a tiny bit of marketing.
RAW has given the opportunity for ANY photograph to look a lot better than it could have looked before. Low-res color capped inet and monitors even more. So everyone has access to criticising, uploading, downloading, the full chain, but they know no shit and have no education on the matter. This means: we believe we are the best, yet we are just growing more and more stupid. It's the full chain of stupidness. It's worked in lots of other art disciplines.
It's like...everyone think they are philosophers " 'cause man, I know what I'm talking about, it's life", musicians, or whatever they wanna think they are.
RAW has made GOOD photography go under the shadows of BAD photography, so while far back in time only way to understand photography was watching it in galleries, and reading good books, learning about Ansel Adams and so on, now, shitty photographers write shitty books and they can even get famous.
Yeah I'm not a positive kind of guy (some people say, the positive guys, the more competition, the more we develop and improve, yeah...we're much better than the greeks now due to that way thinking, aren't we?), but look to the music picture: once, it was The Beatles, Led Zeppelin, and Rolling Stones making the massess move. Now, it's Jonas Brothers, Lady Gaga not Radio Gaga...you can say that mass aproval means it's better. A lot of people reject, and so do I.
Music went almost the same road, and it's getting worse and worse as MIDI things can do everything today. Is music getting any better? Ain't cheap production and distribution just everything? You know it's a lot to talk about...
But yeah sure RAW has led to more good looking photographies than ever, no doubt about it. At what cost, we'll see. Or...we're already seeing it. Have you gone to the cinema lately?
Same old story, "new" art discipline moving towards mediocrity. I don't give a shit, I'll try to keep on learning, watching and living to tell something, that's it. TO TELL SOMETHING. Good thing is most people don't know how to show anything with their photos, cinema or music. Bad thing...that doesn't mean money. Oh well...it's a hard life.
@stip yeah, I never said in what amount of time....it may take them a week, or a year. But it will not take them 30 years of experience to "become a photographer"
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