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Johan, you appear to be intent on arguing for the sake of it. The day professional photographers start using cellphones for all their shoots is the day I'll believe that a DSLR offers little advantage over a phone.
IMO some one is gonna win, Its not gonna be the best photo, its not gonna be taken with the best camera.Its gonna be the photo the judges love that stand out for them and not us .Even if we vote for the photos it wont be the same one. SO IMO have fun enjoy and upload for people to see, you might win and if u do congratsI'm not arguing. :wtf:
I'm trying to tell you to enjoy your photography. Use your camera (be it cellphone, point-and-shoot or DSLR), and take some photos - within the camera's capabilities.
No doubt DSLRs offer a lot of advantages over cellphone cameras. Professional photographers cannot use cellphone cameras as they have disadvantages that they cannot afford (think wedding photographers having to take photos in low-light conditions).
What I'm saying is, don't blame the camera - stay within the limits of the camera and you can take great photos. Just don't blame your camera if you can't get great photos which would never have been possible with that specific camera in the first place. Blame yourself for not knowing a specific photo it outside the reach of your camera. If you need something more, then it's time to start investing in more expensive camera equipment.
BUT ENJOY IT! No matter what camera you have. Just take the bloody photos!
I was trying to get a more positive approach to the fabulous hobby of photography. That I'm being seen as being argumentative tells me to leave this thread alone to let people whine and complain about how unfair life is.
IMO some one is gonna win, Its not gonna be the best photo, its not gonna be taken with the best camera.Its gonna be the photo the judges love that stand out for them and not us .Even if we vote for the photos it wont be the same one. SO IMO have fun enjoy and upload for people to see, you might win and if u do congrats![]()
Looks the like the photoshoppers will win, personally I prefer original pictures not touched up to look brighter or darker or to have enhanced lines/colours which makes it look unnatural.
BUT ENJOY IT! No matter what camera you have. Just take the bloody photos!
I was trying to get a more positive approach to the fabulous hobby of photography. That I'm being seen as being argumentative tells me to leave this thread alone to let people whine and complain about how unfair life is.
Looks the like the photoshoppers will win, personally I prefer original pictures not touched up to look brighter or darker or to have enhanced lines/colours which makes it look unnatural.
Don't bother, some people just like to moan, even though they have no clue what they're moaning about./text
Give a great photographer a cheap point and shoot and he/she is still going to be able to produce a great photo.
You do realise that every single camera out there with every single 'scene' mode it has will render the exact same photo taken with the exact same ISO/Aperture/Shutterspeed differently, and that their sensors will even have a role to play in that, right?
You also realise that every single physical film out there reacts differently and that the processing of that film has a massive effect on the final image, and that when a print is made of that film the printing paper used as well as the processes used to make the print will have a massive effect on the final outcome, right?
Did you know that in the film world, and to a VERY large extent the digital photography world even today, the photo you took and the end result you get are seldom going to represent reality accurately right off the bat?
This is again why it leaves me flabbergasted that people could get so upset about photos being 'edited' or 'photoshopped'. Maybe I should have left this photo looking like it did on the left, or that photo looking like it did, or the other photo looking like it did, all straight off the camera.
They don't one look anything at all like what I saw, but they're not 'manipulated' by my hand, so it should be fine! Right?
By the by, that fly photo is a stack of 9 photos, because my super fancy DSLR's sensor is so big that the depth of field is drastically narrower than most compact cameras'. If I had a compact camera I could have taken a single photo to get more in focus than I did, likely even with sharper results.
And I had to take it with this because I can't afford to drop money on a macro lens. I could use a reversal adapter for my 18-55mm kit lens, but the results aren't as good as what I get with this thing, and a reversal adapter would cost me more and place the rear element of that lens at risk.
Seriously, if you think it's all about 'photoshop', you simply don't have a clue what you're talking about. The results you're looking at among the finalists are not one 'photoshopped' either. They're processed.
nanonyous, let's step back and focus on the most important aspect, in my view. Let me repeat what I said and see if you agree or disagree:
"I still maintain that if two photographers stood in the same place and shot the same subject in the same conditions then the DSLR would win out every single time."
ClintZA, no. If a photo cannot stand on its own two feet for what it is, all the sharpness in the world isn't going to mean jack. Some of the world's greatest, most awe inspiring photos are a blurry mess, but they're great because of qualities other than sharpness.
Mind posting a link to your pic? I'd love to see it nowA photographer I know from a photography website (Outdoorphoto) had this as his signature, and I agree 100%:
"A technically perfect photo can be the most boring photo ever". (or something to that effect).
I hate doing this, but to use myself as an example.
2 months after I bought my first DSLR (then a Nikon D80) I went to the Kruger Park. At the time I only had the kit lens (18-135mm) and a Sigma 70-300. Now everybody with the most basic of photography knowledge would know that the 70-300 is notoriously bad....so much so that I actually GAVE mine away some time ago. But at the time that was all I had. And very little photography skills and experience, and NO Photoshop skills. I took an image there, with the 70-300, which I had to crop about 50%, it wasn't sharp at all - partly due to the crappy lens but also due to my poor photography skills. But that one single photo has earned me more money than I have made with all of me wife's and my photos on Shutterstock - COMBINED!
Why? It wasn't technically a good photo, but it was a special moment. It appeared in newspapers around the world, and was even on Sky news Australia.
If I had taken that same photo with an iPhone, the end result would've been the same. Purely because of the moment captured.
If I had taken that same photo with an iPhone, the end result would've been the same. Purely because of the moment captured.