Lensman,
Good to hear that you "find some of your own poetry" in the (second) "face".
lensman":1a52djt4 said:
DM, ... A very nice "quite place" to sit I should imagine, contemplating which camera to buy next.....or maybe that's just me ... David
Actually, I've only bought one camera per year (in the depths of Winter over the last four years time) with fairly modest means, and considering (equally) modestly priced gear ...
The fact that the large majority of my images posted on this forum (excepting some DMC-FZ30, DMC-FZ50, and DMC-LX3 shots posted) were taken with shirt-pocket sized, center-area auto-focus only (with no PASM modes), 6-8 Mpixel Panasonic Lumix cameras with quite small and rather modest in-camera lens assemblies, which (in their prime marketing-times) sold brand-new for a mere $200 USD is (to me) a testament that the most important elements (for me) may well be as follows:
(1) Finding
interesting subjects to photograph;
(2) Revisit the subjects frequently waiting for
favorable natural lighting conditions;
(3) Be aware of the available (
actual) Depth of Field when you focus on a subject(s);
(4) Strive (by brute-force repetition and redundancy) to get the focus on the intended subject(s)
right;
(5) Maintain
camera-stability (by mechanical and/or electronic means such as Image Stabilization servos);
(6) Leave a bit of "cropping"
space in the image-frame around what (may just seem) like a good composition at the time;
(7) Tenaciously shoot about 50-60 shots (changing shooting-perspective, and manually bracketing exposure levels) to yield one lone "gem";
(8) Take (at least)
1000 investigatory shots with a camera before you think that you are truly familiar with what it can (and cannot) do for you;
(9) Carefully
sift through your results, selecting only those with proper focus and the best camera-stability for further post-processing;
(10) Spend
hours lovingly cropping and carefully polishing your (usually just a handful) of "little gems".
In the end, my part in the process is 98% perspiration (tenacity, perseverance), and 2% "magical luck" (serendipity, mystical moments).
Fancier (and more expensive) photo gear has not (in my case) made a big difference - it only increase my expectations (but not my skills).
DxO (and such tools) are wonderful, but many of the shots that you like are from JPGs processed with humble editors such as PaintShop Pro 9.
"Being there", perseverance, and imagination (in shooting and in post-processing) are (for me) the most important elements ...
