MarkBarbieri
Semi-retired
- Joined
- Aug 20, 2006
- Messages
- 6,172
Many eons ago, when I first started shooting, you had no choice but to get it right in the camera. There was no Photoshop. What you shot was what you got. OK, there was some flexibility in how the photo was developed or printed, but it was limited and for only the elite few that did their own developing and printing.
Fast forward to today. Most serious photographers shoot digital and do some post processing. This has lead to some photographers getting lazy when they shoot with the expectation that they'll "fix it" in post production. This, in turn, has lead to others decrying that practice and admonishing people to "get it right" in the camera.
In general, I agree with this advice. You'll have a better picture if you don't have to level your picture or boost your exposure in post production. However, like just about everything in life, the optimum practice is not at the extremes. I think that there are things that can or even should be fixed in post production. What do you think should be left for post production rather than "getting it right" in the camera?
1) HDR shots. When you want to capture a scene with a very wide dynamic range, you have choices. You can use graduated neutral density filters to try to manage the range before you shoot. Alternatively, you can take shots at different exposures and blend them using HDR. In some cases, typically those involving motion, it is best to go the GND route. For static scenes, I think you'll actually get a better picture going the HDR route.
2) Framing. When I shoot action sports, I tend to frame wider than I want my final product. Modern cameras usually have pixels to spare. I find that if I try to get my in-camera framing perfect, I have fewer keepers because of framing errors. If I shoot wide and then crop to the framing I want, I get better results.
3) White Balance. I shoot RAW. Getting the white balance right in camera provides very little benefit. In theory, my histogram will be more accurate with correct white balance. It also saves one minor step in post processing. If I'm going to be shooting a lot with one light source, I'll usually rough set the white balance, but I don't make a big deal of it. I don't get better pictures by handling my white balance in post production, but I don't get worse pictures either.
4) Exposure. OK, I usually do try to get my exposure correct in camera. That usually does make for better pictures. One exception is when I'm shooting a scene with relatively low dynamic range. In that case, I deliberately over-expose. Not so much that I blow out my highlights, but I up the exposure as high as possible without going over that line. In post production, I drop the exposure down. I do this because the camera's sensor picks up more information with less noise that way.
5) Spray and pray. Sometimes, rather than trying to exactly time something, I just bump up the fps and fire off a burst. At 8 frames per second, I'm more likely to get a shot at the perfect time than I would trying to time my shutter click to the exact right moment. This doesn't work with flash and it does waste a lot of space. When trying to catch the perfect moment, I've found that "spraying and praying" actually works better than trying for perfect timing. OK, that's not really a post-production fix, but it is a shift from film (where you pay for every frame) to digital (where mistakes are essentially free).
Disagree with any of these? What other situations is it unimportant to "get it right" in the camera rather than just dealing with it in post production?
Fast forward to today. Most serious photographers shoot digital and do some post processing. This has lead to some photographers getting lazy when they shoot with the expectation that they'll "fix it" in post production. This, in turn, has lead to others decrying that practice and admonishing people to "get it right" in the camera.
In general, I agree with this advice. You'll have a better picture if you don't have to level your picture or boost your exposure in post production. However, like just about everything in life, the optimum practice is not at the extremes. I think that there are things that can or even should be fixed in post production. What do you think should be left for post production rather than "getting it right" in the camera?
1) HDR shots. When you want to capture a scene with a very wide dynamic range, you have choices. You can use graduated neutral density filters to try to manage the range before you shoot. Alternatively, you can take shots at different exposures and blend them using HDR. In some cases, typically those involving motion, it is best to go the GND route. For static scenes, I think you'll actually get a better picture going the HDR route.
2) Framing. When I shoot action sports, I tend to frame wider than I want my final product. Modern cameras usually have pixels to spare. I find that if I try to get my in-camera framing perfect, I have fewer keepers because of framing errors. If I shoot wide and then crop to the framing I want, I get better results.
3) White Balance. I shoot RAW. Getting the white balance right in camera provides very little benefit. In theory, my histogram will be more accurate with correct white balance. It also saves one minor step in post processing. If I'm going to be shooting a lot with one light source, I'll usually rough set the white balance, but I don't make a big deal of it. I don't get better pictures by handling my white balance in post production, but I don't get worse pictures either.
4) Exposure. OK, I usually do try to get my exposure correct in camera. That usually does make for better pictures. One exception is when I'm shooting a scene with relatively low dynamic range. In that case, I deliberately over-expose. Not so much that I blow out my highlights, but I up the exposure as high as possible without going over that line. In post production, I drop the exposure down. I do this because the camera's sensor picks up more information with less noise that way.
5) Spray and pray. Sometimes, rather than trying to exactly time something, I just bump up the fps and fire off a burst. At 8 frames per second, I'm more likely to get a shot at the perfect time than I would trying to time my shutter click to the exact right moment. This doesn't work with flash and it does waste a lot of space. When trying to catch the perfect moment, I've found that "spraying and praying" actually works better than trying for perfect timing. OK, that's not really a post-production fix, but it is a shift from film (where you pay for every frame) to digital (where mistakes are essentially free).
Disagree with any of these? What other situations is it unimportant to "get it right" in the camera rather than just dealing with it in post production?




), I can't depend on post-processing for everything!