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Preface


Photography attracts creative problem solvers. Masters such as W.
Eugene Smith, Jerry Uelsmann, and Ansel Adams worked with more
technical aces up their sleeves than a riverboat gambler. Their
ingenuity and photographic prowess inspired this book.

If you were able to see an original contact print for
Adams's "Moonrise,
Hernandez," you'd realize that the
raw photograph he took in 1941 looked much different from subsequent
enlargements hanging on museum walls years later. By
Adams's own admission, it was a difficult negative
to print. He masked certain areas and intensified others. What is
arguably Ansel Adams's most acclaimed picture
required every ounce of his talent and creative problem solving. In
other words, he hacked the heck out of it.

Our tools are different now. Instead of an 8" 10" view camera, many
photographers are toting pocket-sized digicams. What was once the red
glow of a darkroom safelight has been replaced by the cool, white
radiance of an LCD computer monitor.

I'm one of those heretics who believe that
digitizing the photographic process has strengthened, not weakened,
the medium. The practice of making creative imagery is more
accessible to more people than ever. Access to innovation is what
this book is all about.

Digital photography brings out the most wonderful things in people.
An otherwise conservative businessman will shoot with carefree
abandon when a digital camera is placed in his hands. Self-conscious
teenagers transform into rock stars in front of a zoom lens, and
senior citizens become instant and adept historians.

Digital photography encourages you to take risks. If it
doesn't work out, erase it before anyone knows. The
path to photographic success is littered with discarded pictures that
no one ever saw.

I hope this book helps you take lots of pictures and that you find
things here that you would never have dreamed of trying. Nothing
could make me happier than to hear that you took a creative risk and
ultimately succeeded. If that happens, please write me at

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