Originally Posted by
GrumpyDiver
Mike - I totally agree, to a point. In fact that is similar to an argument I use myself. What a commercial photographer does establishes the "floor", i.e. the minimum amount of work to produce an image that is acceptable to a client. These clients are admittedly not photographers and are unlikely to put things under the same level of scrutiny that many of the members here would. Still it represents an acceptable baseline.
This brings us to that question that can never be answered. "What is good enough". Kim's original posting certainly clears that bar. It is an excellent image that she and the subject should be happy with. The question then becomes "how much effort should one put into post-production?".
Again, the answer I got when I asked a number of the commercial photographers I know ranged from "less than 30 seconds" to around 10 minutes for a large sized print. Again that puts a time / monetary value statement around the time it takes to produce an acceptable commercial image. The other thing I will add, part of the reason that it takes so little time is that these people "get it right in the camera", so the amount of PP is vastly reduced.
The second part of the question is something I refer to as principle of diminishing returns. At some point the additional effort that goes into PP work (even for us amateurs) is going to make marginal improvements. I'm a firm believer in the 80:20 principle that simple suggests that 80% of the total improvements can be accomplished with 20% of the total effort. The other 20% of the improvement will take 80% of the effort. As much as possible, I try to live that rule and if the work cannot be accomplished relatively quickly, perhaps it's not worth the effort given the marginal improvement that will bring.
Bottom line - do I think my edit improved the image. The answer is yes. Second question, do I think that it's perfect, the answer is clearly "no", but in my eyes it passes the "good enough" criterion.