No reframing, no puddling around, etc.
Reminds me of my wife and how she shoots.
Instinctive, no fooling around, first shots usually a keeper.
She's much better than I am at most types of photography, I am
better than her at stuff that requires patience.  She's _much_
quicker, a by-product of her 5 years as a photojournalist on a
small midwestern paper, I assume.

I'm not sure the guy approach of "understanding" technical details helps.
Notice how much bandwidth Caveman and Pal have wasted over _accurate_
exposure recently?

I read this book recently titled, I think, "Faces", by a woman
photographer for a London newspaper.  She ran around for about
35 years with a meterless OM camera, B&W film, and a 200 watt tungsten
light bulb (she sometimes assaulted a lamp with it if she needed a bit more
light).  Her typical shot was with a 100mm f2.8 lens, wide open.

Her stuff is, of course, very good.  She mentioned she noticed that
either the first or last frame on a roll was often the keeper.

Sounds like you are a first frame sort of person.






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