f2bthere said:
Shallow depth of field a fad? Seriously?
Yes, it's a huge fad. Have you not see the threads in every on-line forum about, "
How do I shoot bokeh photos?" And shallow DOF is a huge fad currently. It never used to be, but it is today, in this current era. One eye in focus, the other eye out of focus. Nose out of focus, but that lead eye in-focus. Going for that blurry background, even though it means the subject's close-up face is 50,60,70 percent out of focus. This is currently a very faddish approach that has gained tremendous popularity in recent years. It's a current fad, along with a few other visual tropes, like fake film grain, artificially elevated blacks for that faded-no-deep-blacks-processing look, fake vintage effects, heavy vignettes, and so on. A lot of people are enjoying it.
Photography has always been a popular endeavor, and so fads and trends sweep the field, and then are discarded as something else comes along. The 1980's were HUGE for the Cokin filter system and very heavy effects.In the 1990's it was selective color. In the 2000's it was sloppy borders. Who remembers
laser backdrops in portraiture, or the classic
bride and groom inside a brandy snifter wedding shot?
Remember bell-bottom jeans? How about low-rise jeans? How about what are now being called "Mom jeans", which is the return of the normal-rise jeans that spanned the 1950 to 1999 period? Remember the craze of women's cork-soled "wedge high heels?" Junior high school, 1978...and now... BACK with a vengeance! Fads come and go, and when they are current, people love them...and then they turn their back on them and move on.
Here we go, 1.63 million results on the search string "How do I shoot bokeh photos?"
How do I shoot bokeh photos - Google Search
Or how about 3.98 million hots on the search string, "How do I shoot shallow depth of field photos?"
How do I shoot shallow depth of field photos - Google Search