Wingnut
Veteran Member
Hey, cool ... I took that course too ... way back when I thought it might be fun to make a living taking pictures. Unfortunately, the course could do little about my color-blindness ... and I was way too shy to do weddings and stuff ... so I settled for dabbling in industrial photography for awhile. That didn't require color sense ... just a good eye for detail and a lot of patience. Spent more time chasing people for money than taking pictures, though ... so I went back to working only 8 to 10 hours a day.
Film was the tool in SLR's and you had to go through a heck of a lot to make sure you got the shots that sell ... and spend a lot of time in the darkroom fixing composure problems. These electronic gizmos sure make life easier .... take even more shots than you normally would ... take 'em in pretty high-res ... and then all you need to do is open your photo editing software and play around a little bit and viola! Ansel Adams would be so envious!
And if you think the cameras are pretty snazzy but haven't tried the photo editing software yet ... you're really in for a treat. You can really work some magic in there! I don't have the time to really muck around but my brother-in-law took it up as a hobby and he just sent me the results of his diddling. He'd cleaned up a picture of me in taken in 1952 ... and there's no sign of age on it at all ... all the staining and crackling is gone.
Hey, Argee ... still got the encyclopedia? (I do)
Film was the tool in SLR's and you had to go through a heck of a lot to make sure you got the shots that sell ... and spend a lot of time in the darkroom fixing composure problems. These electronic gizmos sure make life easier .... take even more shots than you normally would ... take 'em in pretty high-res ... and then all you need to do is open your photo editing software and play around a little bit and viola! Ansel Adams would be so envious!
And if you think the cameras are pretty snazzy but haven't tried the photo editing software yet ... you're really in for a treat. You can really work some magic in there! I don't have the time to really muck around but my brother-in-law took it up as a hobby and he just sent me the results of his diddling. He'd cleaned up a picture of me in taken in 1952 ... and there's no sign of age on it at all ... all the staining and crackling is gone.
Hey, Argee ... still got the encyclopedia? (I do)