You said "Knowing the maximum sharpness of a lens is not important, especially in today's world of glass." That statement needs qualification.Not sure how my statement can be overbroad when the topics of this thread, technique, creativity and internalization are incredibly broad.Your statement is overbroad. It depends on the assignment, the audience, the photographer's vision, the subject matter, and a host of other things.As someone who has voiced this concern, in a slightly different way, let me speak to the specifics. I think there are often aspects of photography mentioned here, that don't apply to the every day process of taking a photograph, but to the design of lenses, sensor theory, and every sort of extreme esoteric metric that can be devised.There is a persistent belief in some corners of the photographic world that technical knowledge impedes creativity. The argument goes something like this: if you become too focused on the mechanics, you’ll lose sight of the emotion, the spontaneity, the spark that makes an image resonate. It’s an understandable concern, but it’s based on a false dichotomy. Technical skill and creative expression are not opposing forces; the former can be an essential foundation for the latter.
I think these are great when it comes to conversation/history/etc... but when it comes to making a print, you have to shoot it and then make adjustments. Knowing the maximum sharpness of a lens is not important, especially in today's world of glass.
I think there are situation where you'll want the sharpest lens that's suitable, and situations where it won't matter much. In that sense, the statement is overbroad.I don't think it is overbroad,Again, it depends on a lot of things. That statement is also IMO overbroad.As an example: I have a 61MP Sony that I could use a poorly rated 24-240, and a god rated 50/1.2 GM. Both will capture the shot at 50mm. If I want some other traits then yes understanding aperture and focal range will be of help in composing a look. But the sharpness of the lens (mtf charts) will be of little value in the moment.
You mean where to they start? They start with their goals for the image, and how what they did helped them achieve those goals. Only in unusual cases do they get into feeds and speeds. These people assume that I know all about that.rather I think I am starting at the simplest point of discussion to make my point. We can add the other criteria to further the discussion, ie astrophotography vs professional portraiture vs capturing a kids play. But the discussion can start from where ever we are.
When you ask someone how they took a picture where do you start?When I ask fellow photographers the same question, I don't get any of that information. They don't consider it germane. I'm the same way with others. That kind of minutiae is assumed to be part of a common knowledge base in the circles that I frequent.[SNIP]
On this we agree. Rarely when I ask someone how they took a picture do they give me anything more than, what camera/lens/shutter speed/iso/focal length/processing vector (sooc or pp).The danger isn't in knowing too much. It’s in letting that knowledge sit on the surface, where it can interfere. The solution is not to reject technical skill, but to absorb it so deeply that it disappears from conscious view. When that happens, you’re free, and that freedom is where creativity lives.
See above.How are the components of the process not germane?
It's a local optimum.Wow... think about how oxymoronic this line is. If it is working for them, how can it be wrong?There are many people who do things wrong because those things have worked for them in the past.If I have just those items I can come close to the look. Everything else is how I respond in the moment. And for a better response practice and repetition outweigh technical knowledge.
I'm talking about an optimum with respect to a objective function defined by the photographer. If you don't understand the environment in which you're working, you may have blinders on that will prevent you from doing better.Or they don't care...They don't understand how they are limiting themselves.
Why is the global optimum relevant in photography. Everything with photography is localized to the interests of the photographer and the audience.In mathematical terms, they have achieved a local optimum, and are missing the golbal one.






