I guess next time I go out I’ll have to carry a sign saying I’ve lightened my hair color, covered up some freckles and padded my bra.
My mantra, since my background is in photojournalism, is "Get The Shot!". When you get the shot you want, there are often fixable problems due to the circumstances at the time. People or items in the shot, backgrounds that are not good or dark/bright areas that just couldn't be worked around at the time of the shot, most can be fixed in post-processing. Always want to get the shot 100% right but the world often has other ideas...........................................
THIS! Everyone has their own opinion of what's "allowed" or what even counts as photography. Does it stop counting as photography after a certain amount of post proccesing? At which point is the photograph converted into digital art? Is it ever?Some people like to do photography other people are more interested in digital imaging.
Now this is a good one!I love discussions like this.
My avatar is a fine example of something that cannot be done in camera. It cant even be done in Photoshop / Lightroom.
Take my avatar....
This is the end result I was looking for. I cannot achieve this with a camera so I used the following workflow:
No matter what I do to the photo of Loch Lomond it is still a photo of Loch Lomond. Is it still photography?. It is to me.
- get photo of water. Loch Lomond will do nicely
- Create 3D Scene
- Create a model of 3D Head
- Add objects as necessary
- Create textures
- Add Camera Object
Did you take the photo of Loch Lomond? In that case we're talking about something else, then you've snapped a shot and edited it. If you've downloaded the photo and placed that 3D model on top I'd say it's digital art.
If a musician plays a piece composed by someone else, they're still playing the composition. The person in question is a musician.This is a question I've struggled with finding a definitive answer for as well. If a musician plays a piece composed by someone else, are they any less a musician? If an actor plays a part from a script written by another are they any less an artist? As with the person who compiles a totally new composition from the bits and pieces of photos, each contribute their artistic influence.
Part of the issue might lie in the fact that "digital photography" and the ease of manipulation is relatively new. Unlike the musician and actor example, the understanding and acceptance, of who does what in the digital world is still struggling for a definition. Maybe it's time for Webster's to reevaluate thier definition?
However another example from @Braineack was http://ridgeandramble.com/galleries/ , as her editing don't really appeal to me I wouldn't say that her way of processing images ruins the shot. Her shots, personally, feel much better than the Russian lady's.