Esteemed Bob Walkden wrote:

> Whereas more experienced photographers might take the attitude that 10
> rolls=10 subjects, at most. Again, referring to St. David Hurn (who is
> actually rather scornful of talk about quantity), he says maybe 1/2 a
> dozen frames/subject on average. He also says that for a 7-picture essay
> he would shoot 20-30 rolls of 36-exp. 35mm. Other people's mileage varies,
> of course.

We have not yet talked about the opposite side of the coin, which is that,
the more you shoot of a given subject, the more difficult it is to edit down
to the best shot. For many photographers it's easier to make those decisions
up front and not have to agonize later. It's all a question of personal
style, talent, and comfort level--there's no one right way to do things. It
also depends on why you're shooting something and how you go about getting
your good pictures.
 

> But the point of all this is that non-photographers, and inexperienced
> photographers, tend to think that professionals shoot a lot of film at random.
> It is this misapprehension that leads to people thinking that anybody can get
> good pictures if they shoot enough film.

I think of it more in terms of time spent. If you spend an hour shooting
something, you will get better results than if you spent 10 mintues. The
amount of film you shoot is really only a secondary consideration.

In terms of improving, I think it's a good exercise to occasionally shoot
very heavy--six rolls or more in a day, or at one event. But I also used to
assign my students a "slow down" exercise--they had to clip a single short
length of 35mm film and place it in their cameras in the darkroom, then go
out and spend an hour deciding where to shoot that one shot. This is also a
very interesting exercise, and it develops the opposite faculty--the ability
to be discriminating and to consider your actions and chances of success
carefully beforehand.

Very few photographers will actually do something like this outside of a
classroom situation. But it's a good learning exercise.

--Mike

-
This message is from the Pentax-Discuss Mail List.  To unsubscribe,
go to http://www.pdml.net and follow the directions. Don't forget to
visit the Pentax Users' Gallery at http://pug.komkon.org .

Reply via email to