I've been wondering about this lately.
Partly provoked, I think, by criticism of new cameras that don't show 100% of the image in the viewfinder. I just don't get this. All I can assume is that it is important for people who never crop their images and need to know that what they saw is what will be printed. But who are these people? Photo journalists maybe, but who else?
Sure, none of us wants to waste pixels on unwanted rubbish around the edges of our pictures but my experience is that I always need that bit extra, either because I've not held the camera as square-on as I thought I was doing or because I decide to correct the slight convergence of verticals or horizontals that most pictures seem to end up with.
About which... I used to correct converging verticals only occasionally in the darkroom because it was such a faff. Now - and it might be just a phase I'm going through - I almost always adjust slightly converging/diverging lines to make them parallel, as my brain knows they are in reality. Do others do this? If so, why do you think it important? If not, why do you not do this?
And, on more-or-less the same subject, who cares whether the right format is 4:3 or 3:2? How many times does nature or circumstance give us the perfect picture that fits our frame exactly? I crop my pictures to include everything I think important and exclude everything that is extraneous. So how many end up with the original aspect ratio? Very few. It's no problem at all for on-line display but hell when it comes to framing prints. But would I compromise on this? No!
So I wonder how others think about all this and whether the practise follows the thinking.


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I know what you mean tho....and agree!

