3DDave
Aerospace
- May 23, 2013
- 10,695
In another thread, yet another picture, badly composed, using a fraction of the frame, with bad lighting.
Should engineering degrees require a course in documentary photography and documentation in general and the use of photo editing tools to better isolate the issue at hand?
Too often the person taking the picture has a huge amount of knowledge gained from different orientations, lighting, touching the item, and then all that is supposed to be available in one photo.
Blurred ID plates where the manufacturer name and part number - asking for help with the particular item.
Close up photos of tiny details with no scale or means to understand the detail in the context of how it is used.
I still recall a guy coming back with photos from a site visit with every picture containing his blurred pinky blocking part of the scene.
Should engineering degrees require a course in documentary photography and documentation in general and the use of photo editing tools to better isolate the issue at hand?
Too often the person taking the picture has a huge amount of knowledge gained from different orientations, lighting, touching the item, and then all that is supposed to be available in one photo.
Blurred ID plates where the manufacturer name and part number - asking for help with the particular item.
Close up photos of tiny details with no scale or means to understand the detail in the context of how it is used.
I still recall a guy coming back with photos from a site visit with every picture containing his blurred pinky blocking part of the scene.