We always use Adams as a sort of test. If he did it, we are allowed to do it too. IE, enhance or manipulate the raw image to taste. So I always ask myself what he actually did?
We know for sure he dodged and burned. Today we still have this option as well as blended images, HDR and a multitude of Photoshop tools and plug-ins to enhance dynamic range.
The term unsharp mask comes from a darkroom technique that I am sure Adams was familiar with and used.
We know he had access to films and papers and chemistry that could adjust contrast to taste.
So after the shoot, Adams could enhance DR, contrast and sharpness for sure. He could also crop.
I suppose he could have made composite images using more than one original. But I am not aware that he ever did this or even needed to.
Adams did not do much color and as far as I know he used chromes when he did. One thing he disliked about color films was the lack of control during processing. But of course we have this ability in spades, and we could assume Adams would embrace it.
But I always go back to his images and his very careful capture methods. He was meticulous. His images always look razor sharp, perfectly exposed and that cropping was seldom required. After all, he had a multitude of lenses, cameras and bellows he could adjust to get the perfect framing and focus on the scene. One doubts he gave up much of the original for crop.
His images never look as if they were manipulated to be anything other than a perfect black and white representation of what he saw on scene when viewing the ground glass with a loupe. I suspect most of his effort was aimed at teasing out the maximum dynamic range between pure black and pure white with contrast being next in importance. I suspect USM was only required to compensate for the minor looses to his equipment and not to correct focus errors.
I take this as my personal guide. Do it right when you take it. Fix the shortcoming inherent to the technology IE. AA filter blur, dynamic range and color accuracy. Add as much color and saturation and contrast as you feel is required to get the emotional contact. Crop if you must, but strive to learn how to compose on scene.
If I need to do something in post process to correct an error I could have avoided on the scene, I feel like I have a 2nd class image.
That’s my 2 cents.
We know for sure he dodged and burned. Today we still have this option as well as blended images, HDR and a multitude of Photoshop tools and plug-ins to enhance dynamic range.
The term unsharp mask comes from a darkroom technique that I am sure Adams was familiar with and used.
We know he had access to films and papers and chemistry that could adjust contrast to taste.
So after the shoot, Adams could enhance DR, contrast and sharpness for sure. He could also crop.
I suppose he could have made composite images using more than one original. But I am not aware that he ever did this or even needed to.
Adams did not do much color and as far as I know he used chromes when he did. One thing he disliked about color films was the lack of control during processing. But of course we have this ability in spades, and we could assume Adams would embrace it.
But I always go back to his images and his very careful capture methods. He was meticulous. His images always look razor sharp, perfectly exposed and that cropping was seldom required. After all, he had a multitude of lenses, cameras and bellows he could adjust to get the perfect framing and focus on the scene. One doubts he gave up much of the original for crop.
His images never look as if they were manipulated to be anything other than a perfect black and white representation of what he saw on scene when viewing the ground glass with a loupe. I suspect most of his effort was aimed at teasing out the maximum dynamic range between pure black and pure white with contrast being next in importance. I suspect USM was only required to compensate for the minor looses to his equipment and not to correct focus errors.
I take this as my personal guide. Do it right when you take it. Fix the shortcoming inherent to the technology IE. AA filter blur, dynamic range and color accuracy. Add as much color and saturation and contrast as you feel is required to get the emotional contact. Crop if you must, but strive to learn how to compose on scene.
If I need to do something in post process to correct an error I could have avoided on the scene, I feel like I have a 2nd class image.
That’s my 2 cents.