Thanks for that question Chris. I wouldn't say it impacts how we *shoot* the images but it does impact how we edit/process/develop them. We always want a print to look accurate in person to how that same image looked on screen, which tends to result in us taking the lights in our images that fraction higher without anything getting close to being blown out.
Thanks for that question Chris. I wouldn't say it impacts how we *shoot* the images but it does impact how we edit/process/develop them. We always want a print to look accurate in person to how that same image looked on screen, which tends to result in us taking the lights in our images that fraction higher without anything getting close to being blown out.
Thanks for that question Chris. I wouldn't say it impacts how we *shoot* the images but it does impact how we edit/process/develop them. We always want a print to look accurate in person to how that same image looked on screen, which tends to result in us taking the lights in our images that fraction higher without anything getting close to being blown out.