Subject | Re: converting raw images from Canon EOS 600D |
From | PeterN |
Date | 12/07/2013 14:27 (12/07/2013 08:27) |
Message-ID | <l7v7m70vkr@news6.newsguy.com> |
Client | |
Newsgroups | rec.photo.digital |
Follows | Eric Stevens |
Followups | Tony Cooper (48m) > PeterN |
Eric StevensEric, You are arguing against mediocrity.
On Fri, 06 Dec 2013 18:59:08 -0500, nospam <nospam@nospam.invalid> wrote:nospamEric Stevens
In article <9fn4a9t5g65j06rsia3gj7c304slcldv3q@4ax.com>, Eric Stevens <eric.stevens@sum.co.nz>wrote:nospamEric StevensPeterNsome photographers did do their own darkroom work, but as i said, it wasn't required. many pro photographers worked with a pro lab who took care of the details.Eric Stevens
And the photographer had no idea of what kind of things the lab could do for them.
And the good ones give precise instructions to the lab. In order to give instructions to the lab, the good photographer must understand what a lab can, and cannot do. If the instructions are not followed, the lab doesn't get paid.
Quite.
quite wrong. have you ever worked with a pro lab?
Yes.nospamEric Stevens
you tell them *what* you want, not *how* to do it.
you don't tell them how many seconds of exposure or how long to leave it in the developer. *they* handle that part.
Not always. Knowledgeable photographers push the limits for valid reasons and the lab understands and accepts this.