Sunday, April 6, 2008

Faking It

The human eye can see across a wide range of tones; can make sense of details in extremes of highlight and shadow. A camera can't; particularly a digital camera, no matter how expensive or sophisticated. There is a limited range of tones it can capture, and high contrast scenes, with, for example, bright sky and dark foreground, simply cannot be replicated as the eye sees them. However, since digital technology has become more widespread and more sophisticated it has become more common to see "photographs" we'd rarely have seen 10 or 20 years ago.

While skilled darkroom practicioners could produce beautiful prints in the developing processs, the average photographer had to make a choice between capturing either highlights or shadows. I still believe film reacts better to such extremes, and doesn't lose as much detail as digital capture does at either end of the range. With good darkroom technique, careful attention to exposure and a clear vision of the final print, skilled photographers using film can achieve the 'vision' they see when they set up the shot.

In the digital age, there's far too much temptation to click like bejaysus and hope to fix the picture up in post-processing. (I've heard pro photographers say "stick it on Program and sort it out later") There are far too many blendings of multiple images and uses of HDR, (High Dynamic Range, if you really want to know), software to get a result.The art of "correct" exposure is in danger of being lost.

To illustrate the point; I was driving home the other night along a narrow back road, running late, with the dogs in the car, when the sun broke through the clouds. It looked wonderful. The camera was on the front seat, but it wouldn't and couldn't see what I was seeing. And there wasn't the time or space to take/make a picture, so I just stopped in the road and jumped out of the car, bracketed the shot, hopped back in, and didn't look at the result until tonight. Didn't like it, so gave it 60 seconds post-processing time. Here it is. Look at the meeting between the sky and the ground; the lightened line in the sky. Does it look real? With a bit longer, it could look fine, I'm not sure I'd ever like it. It's a picture, but whether it's a photograph is debatable. For many photographers it might be; for lots of photogrphers, it still would be after lots more manipulation.

Not great, obviously; not a work of art, but still; an interesting sky over the Plains of Boyle with the yellow whins in bloom. But not at all what came out of the camera. It's an amalgam of the two pictures beneath, which you're seeing as the camera saw them - straight out, untouched.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hi John, We all realise that the camera ha always fell short of recording exactly what our eye sees.
The end picture is what counts, not whether it was shot on film or digital, or indeed whether it is an accurate record of what the human eye might see.
Your example suggests that your "sixty seconds of post proccessing" was not spent correctly in PS! The bright horizon line would not exist if correct PS techniques were used.
Bracketing yes, layers yes, eraser tool yes, a percentage of layer blending modes yes! HDR in some cases for special effect yes!

John Reynolds said...

Fair enough, up to a point. The question is, at what point does a 'photograph' become a 'picture'?

Anonymous said...

That question will remain! The answer may be as simple as:
A photograph becomes a picture as soon as it receives editing of any kind.
"Photograph" = a likeness obtained by photography
"Picture" = a design or representation made by various means (as painting, drawing, or photography)
People take photographs and some people make pictures from the photos they take.