I'm just the opposite of a lot of photographers who want everything to be really, really sharp. And they're always, you know, stopping it down to F64.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Of course I realize that photography is not the technical facility as much as it is the eye, and this decision that one makes for the moment at which you are going to snap, you know.
The glory of 70mm is the sharpness of the image it offers.
I'm no snapshot artist. I make very careful choices always, even if I'm using a 35mm camera.
Those who want to be serious photographers, you're really going to have to edit your work. You're going to have to understand what you're doing. You're going to have to not just shoot, shoot, shoot. To stop and look at your work is the most important thing you can do.
You have to be sharp when the camera's rolling. I want to be totally unselfconscious, like a child playing. I do as much prep as possible so I can lose myself for those seconds.
With photography, I always think that it's not good enough.
It's really, really hard to make it as a fine-art photographer exclusively.
Photography used to be not for the faint of heart. Its rigors would weed out the not-so-committed pretty quickly. You had to crank the f-stop ring yourself!
Anybody can be a great photographer if they zoom in enough on what they love.
There are some elements of digital photography that I don't really like, such as the fact that you see the results immediately.
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