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Author Topic: HOW TO BE A COOL PHOTOGRAPHER  (Read 829 times)
Analog6
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« on: June 12, 2008, 05:46:46 PM »

Found this on another forum - someone there actually took it seriously and got offended!


1. The first rule of a cool photographer: Do NOT show your photographs.
2. The second rule of a cool photographer: Do not show your photographs! If somebody asks you to show them - make an excuse. Tell about terabytes of raw images on your computer, being busy, copy and other rights, agreements with "Harper's Bazaar", "Esquire", and other fancy magazines and advertisement agencies.
3. If you have a blog, post there a few photos of renown photographers with moderately positive comments such as "That's how one should do it!". Theorise a lot!
4. As an exception, you can post 2-3 abstract-looking photos with a note "I am just fooling around" or "these are my juvenile experiments". No more than that!
5. Register on all possible forums, mailing lists, websites devoted to photography. Post often, criticise moderately, without fanaticism. Use expressions like "so-so", "boring s**t", "the horizon level is off", "faded colours", "is there an idea?" "is there a concept?", etc. Really cool photographer can always find something to criticize. Never praise. Mock newbies until their full destruction.
6. Learn the terminology. The words "expocorrection", "bracketing", "crop", "polarisation" should always be in your arsenal. Use them!
7. Learn the jargon and use it fearlessly.
8. Disdain the rules, but ridicule those who disregard them.
9. Learn names of 2-3 famous photographers, and know the Cliff's notes description of their work. Use this when theorising and criticising.
10. Install the latest version of Photoshop. Master the "stamp" tool. Tell everybody that you don't use Photoshop on principle. Ridicule all who uses it.
11. Photo filters are crouches for disabled. Universal lenses are suitable for handless and footless. A really cool photographer uses different lenses for each situation, and uses his feet and head for moving objects closer and farther away.
12. Buy a camera. Remember, Canon belongs to cheap pop-culture; Panasonic, Sony, Olympus and Konica are all garbage. In the worst case, buy Nikon or Pentax, but you'd be better off with Leica or Hasselblad. If you don't have enough money, buy a wide-angle "Kiev". You don't need to put any expensive film in it - just carry the camera with you.
13. The more lenses, flashes, filters, exponometers are in your photobag, the cooler you are!
14. Cool pros use film or the most expensive digital SLR's. If you don't have enough money for 1D Mark, carry an old film camera, motivating it by the fact that digital is inferior to the film. Argue about wrong colour reproduction, low resolution, and the young age of the technology.
15. If you are using a DSLR, claim that you ignore the screen and even the built-in exponometer, setting everything based on your vision and expertise.
16. Get a friend with a photo-studio and drink with him regularly.
17. Every so often, disappear for a couple of days. Claim that you had a large-volume contract and you were stuck in the studio, or that you flew in the "National Geographic" helicopter to shoot geysers in Kamchatka.
18. Display on your desk a certificate of some photo-school, but don't forget to mention that you have outgrown your teachers.
19. Memorise Ken Rockwell's article. Disprove it or substantiate it depending on the situation.
20. Learn all the camera models back to the 40s. Read the new releases, and know all modern cameras, lenses, flashes.
21. Be aware of photo exhibitions. You don't need to attend them, familiarising yourself with the reviews would suffice.
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« Reply #1 on: June 13, 2008, 08:12:45 AM »

Sorry I've been out of touch. I just went on a hike to the North Pole with Norwegian National Geographic. As soon as the film from my Linhof Technika has been processed in my lab's special blend of equine uric acid and Jamaican caffeic acid with a touch of bovine effluvia (they're a totally green lab, even hand-crafting their own natural gelatin-based films), I'll scan them on my http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/463800-REG/Hasselblad_70380301_Flextight_X5_Drum_Scanner.html Hasselblad Flextight X5 drum scanner, process them through Corel PaintShop Pro (like I'd deign to use that other program). I'll probably post one or two, once I clear the copyright issues.

Not like the good ol' days when my dad taught me to print on a homemade enlarger built from a Deardorff 8x10 with a Schneider apochromatic 210mm lens. Man I miss Oriental paper.

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« Reply #2 on: June 13, 2008, 09:13:16 AM »

Seagull 'G' of course?

BTW, Brian the processing mix sounds a bit on the nose!

...and Odille, oh ye of recently acquired, slightly left bank Hasselblad, who are you to speak of cool?
I can see you swaggering down isle 4 of Woolworths, with the blad swinging nonchalantly from a shoulder, just in case a 'decisive moment' should arise somewhere near the check out. Do I wear digital today, or film? Decisions. Grin
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Analog6
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« Reply #3 on: June 13, 2008, 02:37:56 PM »

ROFLOL - the cat thinks I am nuts, I nearly fell off the chair.  Still, I left myself wide open for that one!
« Last Edit: June 13, 2008, 02:38:29 PM by Analog6 » Report to moderator   Logged

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« Reply #4 on: June 14, 2008, 07:52:54 AM »

The scariest thing about that response is you are one post short of highest 'poster'. You can't do that! Behave. Don't you have user manual to read or something?
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« Reply #5 on: July 07, 2008, 01:27:52 AM »

Love it.  Grin
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