Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/05/07

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Subject: [Leica] photo'ing in a seminar. What would you have done?
From: s.dimitrov at charter.net (Slobodan Dimitrov)
Date: Sun May 7 07:26:21 2006
References: <6.1.0.6.2.20060507020600.06182030@192.168.100.42>

The standard rule is asking permission first. If one or two say no,  
just tell them you'll keep them out of the frame. If it's a  
compositional nightmare, then go back to enjoying the moment.

Slobodan Dimitrov
Studio G-8,
Angels Gate Cultural Center
http://sdimitrovphoto.com





On May 7, 2006, at 2:17 AM, Richard wrote:

> I was in a seminar today. There were 7 of us, critiquing each  
> other's work under the guidance of the lecturer (On topic: she used  
> to use a Leica too, may be still does). After a few hours, I  
> thought the interaction happenings were good, so I took out my M  
> and shoot here and there. Just a frame now and then. We went to  
> lunch and after restarting, I started firing off a shot or two.  
> Then one of the participants looked up and said, she doesn't  
> appreciate to be in the pictures, so of course I put the camera  
> away then. None of the other people, including the lecturer, spoke  
> up either before or after, and I know for sure that they saw me  
> shooting.
>
> So what would you have done? Not shooting at all since it may be  
> distracting? Ask permissions in the beginning first? Or? I sort of  
> figured that since we are all photographers that being  
> photographing would not have been an issue. Guess I was wrong.
>
> // richard (This email is for mailing lists. To reach me directly,  
> please use richard at imagecraft.com)
>
> _______________________________________________
> Leica Users Group.
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In reply to: Message from richard-lists at imagecraft.com (Richard) ([Leica] photo'ing in a seminar. What would you have done?)