Bill....as I was scrolling down this page reading each post and started to view your image, I thought "hmmm", not much to it! Then I continued to scroll till I viewed the entire frame of the shot including that little bird in the lower right hand corner. Wow, changes the entire impact of the shot (an excellent one at that). As they say "I've now seen the entire picture and get it"...LOL! The approach to the subject matter is different and unique and that is one of a number of reasons it really works!
Marc said something in his post (above) that truly resonated with me. Yes, I am a firm believer that the right tool for the job is generally preferable but I too sometimes like the challenge of approaching things differently and find it creatively stimulating to have some limitations. There have been times I have used MFD when a 35mm DLSR system was the preferable camera/lens combo to use simply to see how I could get the MFD system to adapt, hopefully resulting in capturing images that are both interesting, a bit different and ultimately useful.
Dave (D&A)
Marc said something in his post (above) that truly resonated with me. Yes, I am a firm believer that the right tool for the job is generally preferable but I too sometimes like the challenge of approaching things differently and find it creatively stimulating to have some limitations. There have been times I have used MFD when a 35mm DLSR system was the preferable camera/lens combo to use simply to see how I could get the MFD system to adapt, hopefully resulting in capturing images that are both interesting, a bit different and ultimately useful.
Dave (D&A)