Give me  a brake, Cotty, I've been photograping for 40-45 years - digitally
for the last three.. I do know how to meter. I also know several digital
photographers who,  just like me, underexposes 0.3-0.5 F-stop ALL THE TIME
in order to avoid burned out highlights. Then comes colour problems, that
has to be dealt with. I can't really show you a "before and after" editing
exsample, because I shoot RAW exclusively. Already in the RAW conversion,
there's some - perhaps 25-50% of the total editing. Don't tell me you shoot
digital and do not edit. I don't know anybody who does.

Jens Bladt
http://www.jensbladt.dk
+45 56 63 77 11
+45 23 43 85 77
Skype: jensbladt248

-----Oprindelig meddelelse-----
Fra: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] vegne af Aaron
Reynolds
Sendt: 2. juli 2006 03:50
Til: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
Emne: Re: Coming Soon - A new K-mount Film Camera


On Jul 1, 2006, at 6:56 PM, Jens Bladt wrote:

> I don't know about P&S cameras, but my Pentax DSLR's doesn't deliver
> usable
> photographs without editing - they would be pale, unsharp and dull.
> Editing
> is a must.
> In order to avoid to much contrast (lost mid-tones) or burned out high
> lights (Improve dynamics) I set the camera to make rather dull
> pictures. I
> think I have to edit more than 95% of all exposurers in order to get
> decent
> photographs.

What your problem is, it appears, is your ability to meter.  Compare it
to shooting slides, except that you have the ability to control
contrast easily while shooting.  Once you know how your camera meters
and how it performs in different contrast situations, you can set it
appropriately.  As to sharpness -- if it's always not sharp enough, why
are you not turning the sharpness up?  If you're overly concerned about
losing highlight or shadow, you could always bracket if you don't trust
your own judgment.

>  When I use film, the lab takes care of this. I don't believe
> this is the case with digital printing.

Actually, if you are going to a "regular" minilab, your digital files
are going through the same averaging process that your negatives go
through.  If you're having custom prints made, they are not.  So, in
fact, you can just send them your dull files.  You should try it --
around here it's cheap as dirt.

> Digital is slow and very time consuming. But it's VERY, VERY
> affordable!

Meanwhile, when I shoot with digital professionally, I am doing it
because it's so much faster to turn around the image.  Film is slow and
time consuming.  Digital is fast fast fast.  If you think film is fast
simply because you turn over all control of your image to a lab, you're
not making a valid comparison -- do the same with your digital and see
what happens.

-Aaron

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