[LargeFormat] Garden Landscape Photography

Kent Gibbs largeformat@f32.net
Fri Feb 1 19:51:02 2002


Thank you to all who responded.  I agree that many times less is more,
especially if the intent is to express a feeling rather than straight
up documentation.
 
--- Bob Younger <younger@wwc.com> wrote:
> Let me agree with Les and add a bit....It is in bringing a focus
> (forgive
> the pun) to things that we as photographers and other visual artists
> enable
> people to see what otherwise would have most likely gone unnoticed.
> Often
> the "big picture" does not convey as much as a photograph of just a
> small
> portion.
> 
> For someone who asked "what lens to use," this is all probably more
> than you
> expected, but it has brought to the fore the real question; and
> perhaps the
> answer.....use the lens most appropriate for what you want to
> photograph at
> any given time on any given day in any given garden; each will be
> different.
> 
> Bob Younger
> San Diego, California, USA
> 
> 
> 
> 
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Les Newcomer" <lnphoto@twmi.rr.com>
> To: <largeformat@f32.net>
> Sent: Friday, February 01, 2002 7:06 AM
> Subject: Re: [LargeFormat] Garden Landscape Photography
> 
> 
> > And in Alaska.... well I guess they wouldn't have much need for
> Garden
> > Landscape photography.
> >
> > I say stick with waht you've got, I've you can borrow a 120 or 90
> then see
> > what it can do for you. You don't have to see the entire goarden to
> give a
> > feel for what the landscaper can do.
> >
> > Les
> 
> 
> 
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=====
Kent M. Gibbs
Knuckle Dragging Ramp Ape
(a.k.a. Boeing Flightline Mechanic)

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