Re: Detecting If a Photo Has Been Edited -- How?
- From: "wavelength" <sbrisendine@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: 30 Jul 2005 20:58:59 -0700
No, there is no difference any more.
The guy in the magazine used to sandwich the film together, or do a
multiple exposure. That was still photography because it was "film"
right? What's the differnce now?
The film is 1's an 0's. and the Darkroom is on your computer. It's
still using captured light to create an image.
As for the "too perfect" world syndrome. Maybe you're living in the
"too perfect" and I'm dealing with reality. The idea of perfect and
pristine photographs is seemingly what you want, and maybe I do to.
Guess I'm just a realist, though. Sometimes you have to make lemonade
out of those lemons. Prissy quibbles about "too perfect" be damned. I
make my photographs what I want them to be, IN and OUT of the camera.
.
- Follow-Ups:
- Re: Detecting If a Photo Has Been Edited -- How?
- From: Stacey
- Re: Detecting If a Photo Has Been Edited -- How?
- References:
- Re: Detecting If a Photo Has Been Edited -- How?
- From: Proteus
- Re: Detecting If a Photo Has Been Edited -- How?
- From: wavelength
- Re: Detecting If a Photo Has Been Edited -- How?
- From: Stacey
- Re: Detecting If a Photo Has Been Edited -- How?
- Prev by Date: Re: how do i crack adobe cs without having to register through adobe?
- Next by Date: Re: The Promise of DSLRs
- Previous by thread: Re: Detecting If a Photo Has Been Edited -- How?
- Next by thread: Re: Detecting If a Photo Has Been Edited -- How?
- Index(es):
Relevant Pages
|