Balto
Active member
I hate when people use the difference between taking and making an image to define when someone is a real photographer or w/e. Unless you are running a full external lighting setup with models or props you aren't really making anything. If you go to a park shoot and wander around placing lights experimenting to get a cool shot, you aren't making anything. You need to have a pre plan and idea for a shoot for it to be something you made. Making images is strictly not allowed in photojournalism as you are manipulating the truth, or in real documentary work you are simply an observer and should not interfere with the events. So in these cases you are taking (capturing might be a better word) photos, not making them. Does that diminish the quality of the image or make the photographer any less of one compared to someone on a fashion shoot set? I don't think so at all, the exact opposite really. Anyone can learn lighting set ups and spend hours in the studio positioning lights for a product shot, but that doesn't translate to being able to act and think quickly in the field in very hectic, sometimes life and death situations, having to work with what you are given in the scene and not being able to go to the storage room and grab a diffuser or something.
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