Originally Posted by
GrumpyDiver
I have a love / hate view of many photography websites because they seem to excel at spewing such drivel at the unsuspecting public. Unfortunately, because it is posted on the internet it must be true? As others have pointed out, landscape photography is such a broad genre, pretty well anything goes.
Having an empty foreground – thankfully Ansel Adams and others (including the landscape photographers posting here on CiC) have ignored this suggestion in creating some absolutely magnificent images.
Neglecting composition – this is the only “rule” given in this posting that I can wholeheartedly agree with, but then, this one applies to ALL photography, not just landscape work. In fact, composition is really what the artistic side of photography is all about. It’s every bit as important as the technical execution of the shot (I guess the author missed that one).
Shooting in dull light – really, those landscapes done with the fog rolling in or the rain falling absolute don’t work, right? Sorry, I’ll have to shoot at high noon on a sunny day….
Lack of detail – I guess there’s no room for shallow DoF in landscape work. No beautiful bokeh effects allowed; keep that background absolutely 100% sharp. Sure, right…
Weird horizons – while I have some sympathy for this comment, it also implies that Dutch tilting should never be used in landscape work. Yes, weird horizons done by photographers that don’t know when and how to tilt the camera, yes, this is true, On the other hand I’ve seen some great landscape with tilted fences that worked out beautifully.