jacoggins opened this issue on Mar 04, 2005 ยท 10 posts
jacoggins posted Fri, 04 March 2005 at 2:12 PM
Just saw Kort's wonderful image for the social issue challenge, and a comment he made in his notation brings me to this. How do you choose the best way to crop an image to get the most out of what mood or whatever you are trying to get out of the image? I've taken literally thousands and thousands of photgraphs and the hardest part for me has always been, to crop or not to crop. and how? I open the floor for discussion, as I feel I'm not the only one who has battled this dilema...
JordyArt posted Fri, 04 March 2005 at 2:28 PM
Thank gawd I hadn't misinterpreted what he meant - imagine if he wanted us to get together to mass-debate?!? I've got an amazing eye for cropping, exposure, visualisation and all the rest, so, please excuse me if I don't need to join in ;-) sticks nose in air and walks away wiggling ass (",)
jacoggins posted Fri, 04 March 2005 at 2:33 PM
is it just me or is it getting "snooty" in here? LOL!
LostPatrol posted Fri, 04 March 2005 at 2:47 PM
I don't crop an image, unless I want to make it square, IMO it is just a waste of resolution, so I take more time on the compo instead. This is a far more efficient use of an image.
TwoPynts posted Fri, 04 March 2005 at 3:03 PM
If you have that luxury and get that perfect compo, that is great, but I'm betting that the majority of photograhers all do a little cropping here and there, even if it is just a little off the top, or to remove and edge they didn't see in the viewfinder. I don't always, but will if I suddenly find a gem within an otherwise rough image. For me, I go by my gut as to what works. I can tell if there are elements I don't want in an image from the get go. But sometimes it is harder to make that slice. I have to rely on my ingrained design experient to tell me what works and what doesn't. The beauty of Photoshop is there is always an undo if you didn't work out.
Kort Kramer - Kramer Kreations
bsteph2069 posted Fri, 04 March 2005 at 3:37 PM
TwoPynts posted Fri, 04 March 2005 at 3:59 PM
Kort Kramer - Kramer Kreations
JordyArt posted Sat, 05 March 2005 at 3:51 AM
TwoPynts, are you by some chance related to Michelle?!? You both seem to have the same views on 'vegetables in art' (",) (oh, sorry, fruit and vegetables, seeing as how the tomatoes are technically fruit)
tvernuccio posted Sat, 05 March 2005 at 9:36 AM
Attached Link: http://www.susanchambers.com/learn/cropping.shtml
jack, it's a good question. i've steadily been working on my composition so i don't have crop, but i am no where close to being a good enough photographer that i don't need to crop. Action shots prove to be the most difficult for me in terms of compo. do you print a lot of your photos, Jack? If you're gonna be cropping your images, you might run into difficulties when it comes time to print them. here's a link to a very simple article that gives you a chart so you know how many pixels you need to have when printing at different sizes. and it also shows an example of a photo that was cropped. i don't have any links to any professional sites you can go to that address this topic. Perhaps someone else will have a bit more information.bsteph2069 posted Mon, 07 March 2005 at 5:52 PM
OK. I thought I would wait before replying. But I waited so long it dropped to th enext page. Oh well. I didn't want to crop this tight because I would loose the other two 'cumbers. I did think about reshooting but then it was supposed to be a normal photo to some extent. And isn't his too close a crop? This is what I mean't something as simple as four cucumbers an orange slice a cherry and two tomatoes easilly has two if no three differing points of view. Bsteph