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My experience though is that creativity in many cases can suffer if tools required to maintain that creative outcomes is out of tune by mile. I guess one can call me techie, my day job is in technology heavy sector but far from being a technical employee or engineer. Heck, even studio photography can be technically challenging starting up multiple sources of light, modifiers and ratios. I guess, netizens of this forum have somewhat higher technical standards due to the fact that they are involved in very technical genres of photography, Astro, macro, panorama, BIF, wildlife, sports and action. Only when you cross into big whites territory or shooting wide open with F1.4 primes you start to realise that AFMA is a nessesity due to very thin DoF I have met many professional photos that never ever calibrated their Canon L glass even once. Some people are happy shooting with their canon L glass and never gave a second thought that AFMA was required. There is a distinct line between compulsive gear centric perfectionist and someone that can utilise his technical knowledge in achieving better artistic outcomes. Yes, I like that to be prepared and be on top of the issueīut no one ever called me a techie for being well organised person. It takes 5-10 minutes then get AFMA right anyway.
DO YOU PRINT YOUR OWN TARGET WITH REIKAN FOCAL FULL
I know full well and I had that negative experience shooting with miss calibrated long lens wide open. Is he techie by doing this? Obviously no. Or is a surgeon perfectionist in washing his hands before attending the operation? Actually, am I perfectionist in filling up my car with manufacturer recommended type of petrol (gas)?