----- Original Message ----- 
From: "J. C. O'Connell"
Subject: RE: Pentax DSLR - some questions before I decide Inet


> Your assumption is maximum depth of field is what is
> Always needed when its not. With tilts and swings
> You can entire offset planes in focus with selective (minimal)
> DOF if needed. You cant do that with photoshop
> After the fact.

Umm, no.
That is what you are presuming I mean when I say sufficient depth of 
field is easier to secure.
The original post is intact below so you can refamiliarize yourself if 
you need to.
I did say in my first post on the subject (this is my third, and last) 
that a view camera was better if the person is serious about 
architectural photography.
I expect you just overlooked this.

"> If you are serious about architectural photography, a view camera is
> better."

Anyway, for a more casual approach, an APS DSLR and the tools available 
in Photoshop are sufficient for many people.

I realize that you are not one of these people, and that as far as you 
are concerned, anything less than a view camera is unsuitable for 
architectural photography, so we can drop this one now.



William Robb

>
> With the smaller format, depth of field is generally easy enough to
> secure in architectural work. After that it becomes a question of
> compromise:
> Is the output from the smaller format camera good enough for the
> intended purpose?
> That is something that neither you, nor I, can answer for someone 
> else.




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