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'Reverse engineering' my way through photography.
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<blockquote data-quote="Fuddlestack" data-source="post: 7374" data-attributes="member: 529"><p>It's amazing how much you don't learn with a P&S. Really, they are fantastic photographic computers that do everything for you, so that you don't get a feel for what's happening. Going from an SLR "downwards" is really a much better way to go.</p><p></p><p>The <em>best</em> way to go is to get a 35mm camera with no meter (e.g. a 1950s Leica III variant), some 100 ISO BW film and work up from there, judging the light by eye. But then, I'm an old fogey - it's the kind of thing I <em>would</em> say... <img src="/styles/default/xenforo/smilies/old/wink.gif" class="smilie" loading="lazy" alt=":wink:" title="wink :wink:" data-shortname=":wink:" /></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Fuddlestack, post: 7374, member: 529"] It's amazing how much you don't learn with a P&S. Really, they are fantastic photographic computers that do everything for you, so that you don't get a feel for what's happening. Going from an SLR "downwards" is really a much better way to go. The [I]best[/I] way to go is to get a 35mm camera with no meter (e.g. a 1950s Leica III variant), some 100 ISO BW film and work up from there, judging the light by eye. But then, I'm an old fogey - it's the kind of thing I [I]would[/I] say... :wink: [/QUOTE]
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