)Hi Gang! I am a new member of this site. I have always been a photographic enthusiast but my day job, for the last 50++ years is commercial and portrait photography. This job does not necessarily make me more talented or somehow superior to any other photographer but t gives me a different perspective on practicality and theory vs. practice. This is not gonna be off-topic s pleaseo bear with me.
Please don't misconstrue this to say that I am not into theory, science, optics, and all the technology and technobabble (it's fun) and I even went to school and studied all of that, enjoyed it, and for the most part, left most of it in the classroom. .
Of course, perspective control is an important part of serious image-making. It can be applied to create realistic accuracy of the subject, forced, to engender dynamic lines in composition and altering perspective can change the "statement" an image makes or the story it tells the viewer. There is no doubt that the "recipe" for perspective control is a mixed bag. The theologians of purist theory insist that perspective is only a function of distance. That works on "paper" or in a totally controlled situation, where the photographer can work at various distances and use various focal lengths until he or she finds the effect they like or is attempting to achieve. Out in the field, not so much. Oftentimes I am forced to work from a particular distance and have to employ a focal that will "get the shot".
I am quite familiar with viewing distance issues because some of my images will appear in a small brochure or magazine ad and some will end up on a billboard or the side of a bus- sometimes, I don't know which! I make a shot for a restaurant menu and the client likes it so much he decides to have me create a MURAL for his signage. So folksl will view it on a pamphlet and some folks will see if from across the street! Even in the tightly controlled situation in my portrait studio, I can't work at a distance based on "compression" or expansion of the background, my first consideration is not to distort the subject's face to foreshorten their body. If any of y'all has ever shot with a view camera with a tilting and swing back, that adds a whole new ball of wax to perspective control and forced perspectives.
A lot of this is common sense. A wedding couple is not going to view their wedding album from across the room or on the Jumbotron athe local sports arena. Most of the time a 30x40 executive or institutional portrait in a board boardroom or lobby will not be viewed from inches away, that is unless the viewer is a fussy photographer using a loupe, a microscope, or a telescope from a distance to examine the pixels!
You think this is bad, I just read a post where folks are dissecting the structure of circles of confusion in their "bokeh" and having an intense argument as to what "bokeh" is and how it is actually generated. If I was to chime in and simply say they are romantic little focus light bubbles, I would be verbally set upon and bludgeoned to death.
I have had the privilege and pleasure, over the years, to train many new photographers, kinda break them intothe trade, as it were, and these academic debates would often occur. I would just tell them story of the young couple and the newborn baby. Seems the baby was crying and screaming and would not fall asleep, keeping the mom and dad up all night. Grandma, who lived downstairs, was awaked and came to see if she could help. She found he baby crying in her crib and the rookie parents frantically turning the pages of their "Child and Babay Care" book. Grandma gently said, "Put down the book and pick up the baby"! Problem solved! So, stop arguing, pick up your camera and your lenses, and shot what shoot, not an experimental setup, and SEE what get. You can't move a building or a mountain as you can with a couple of test targets. You can't pose an athlete in midair or shoot from form the third baseline or behind the home-plate unless you are the Ump or the catcher with a bodycam, at a pro baseball game. You can' allways select your shooting distance due to obstructions, restrictions or lighting issues. You learn to work around, improvise and getting job done. The THEORY is great as long as you keep it in back of you mined. Obviously, you can't concentrate on on you subject and applly artfulness if you are bogged down with diagrams, instrumentation, calculators, slide-rules (old school), protractors, and and optical bench) and are too busy fumble with your gear to conform to some axiom. Just call me "GRANDPA"!
The crew here at the NEW DPR has done a yeoman's and heroic job of setting up this forum. I was hoping that the debates would not "go south" with grumpy or vitriolic arguments as that oftentimes spoil online photo forums.
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