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Originally Posted by
Donald
To take the contributions of Manfred and John above and think about them in terms of crafting and composing the scene that you are going to photograph ....
There is one school of thought that leans towards the view that because we have, relatively, easy access to software capable of the job, it doesn't matter what happens to be included in the scene. We can always get rid of later.
Another school of thought is that which leans towards saying, as Manfred suggested above, that you need to get it right at the time of capture. Part of the workflow, if you follow this school of thought, is that you need to 'work-the-scene' in order to get the best composition. You then end up either saying that I've got a good composition, except for that pole in the foreground, or you say I cannot get a good composition because of that pole in the foreground.
If the latter you walk away. If the former, you capture the shot and resolve to 'fix it' in post processing.
I am firmly in the camp of, "I cannot get a good composition because of that pole in the foreground."
I am avid fan of post-processing and often spend a great deal of time on that aspect of making the picture. However for me (and I do not at all condemn others who take a different view) having to resort to removing some substantive structure is a sign of having failed to correctly compose the image in the first place. If there was a big pole in the image when I looked through the viewfinder, then I shouldn't have pressed the shutter at all.
But we all take a different approach to photography and impose different 'rules' upon ourselves. My only point is that before deciding that you need to master the skill of being able to clone out poles, etc, decide whether you are someone who's okay with capturing poles, etc in photographs that you know you'll then want to remove in post processing.