One of the largest debates in the world of photography is split into two main camps. On one side are people who strive to take photos with the highest technical level of image quality — in everything from their equipment to their camera settings — for most of their photos. The other side of the debate says that photographs are more about the subject and emotion of the scene, and the image quality is only a minor factor. Neither side is always right or always wrong, of course, but this is a question worth discussing. When does image quality truly matter, and when is “good enough” more than enough?
Table of Contents
1) Genres of Photography
More than anything else, I am a nature photographer. I do take occasional pictures of people, but the backbone of my portfolio is of the great outdoors — from macro scenes to grand landscapes. That also means that my perspective on this question is a bit one-sided.
Not all genres of photography have the same image quality concerns. For example, many street photographers intentionally shoot with grainy film (or add film-style filters in post-production) to make their images appear grittier and timeless. I haven’t worked with this genre enough to have a well-considered point of view.
So, this article focuses primarily on nature photography. Similar compromises exist in every field, from weddings to still-life, but this article is mainly geared towards people who shoot landscapes.
2) Comparing Famous Photographers
This is one of the major questions of landscape photography, and it makes sense that famous photographers fall on different sides of the “good enough” image quality line. On one end of the debate was Ansel Adams, history’s most famous landscape photographer, who (among other photographers) catapulted the idea of technical perfection into mainstream practice.
Other landscape photographers fall into a different camp. Galen Rowell is one of the more recent famous landscape photographers, and his work is also iconic. Yet, Rowell was known to take pictures with nothing but a simple 35mm camera with a cheap wide-angle lens and lightweight telephoto zoom. Why? Because he had mountains to climb.
The crux of this debate deals with the reasons people are willing to forego the “best” equipment in favor of other options. Although all photographers are different, this typically boils down into a few main factors: weight, price, and speed.
Galen Rowell needed the light weight and quick use of 35mm cameras. Many of his famous mountaintop and climbing photographs wouldn’t have been possible with heavy equipment. Sure, the technical quality of his photos suffered a bit, but his subjects were more important than the size of his film grain.
Ansel Adams, on the other hand, didn’t go on the same technical climbs that Galen Rowell was known for scaling. Instead, he had assistants — and occasionally a mule — to carry his gear long distances. Adams wasn’t sedentary by any means, and he backpacked quite a bit, but most of his landscapes were still reachable with his large and heavy equipment.
So, who took better photos? I’m not going there! These two incredible photographers simply had their own styles, and different types of gear suited them differently. Ansel Adams never would have gotten such large and dramatic prints with a handheld camera — especially in the mid-1900s — and Galen Rowell couldn’t have climbed to some of his most famous photos while carrying forty pounds of camera gear.
3) Camera Settings
Between Ansel Adams and Galen Rowell, the main image quality difference was due to the camera equipment that they used. This matters in your own photos, of course, which is why camera manufacturers offer so many different choices. However, another variable is at play: the amount of time that you take to set the proper camera settings.
At first, this seems like a no-brainer. Obviously, if you have enough time to take your photo, it makes sense to use the best possible camera settings. Right?
Maybe not. Do you use UniWB and check the histogram for every shot, making sure that you always expose to the right? Do you always measure the distance to your closest subject and focus at double that distance, the hyperfocal point? Do you choose the aperture that provides the mathematically best compromise between diffraction, lens sharpness, and depth of field?
For most photographers, the answer is no. I wrote those articles, and I still rarely take my photos with proper hyperfocal distance, the ideal aperture, and perfect ETTR, all at the same time. I may — and typically do — one or two of these things, but the whole set would take ages for every photo.
Plus, things don’t stop there! I could focus stack every single image at f/5.6, since that’s the sharpest aperture on my lens. I could take a set of five bracketed exposures just to make sure that my exposure is as perfect as can be. While we’re at it, why not make every image a panorama? That way, I could get triple the pixels (or much, much more with a multi-row panorama).
And there’s the other problem. Even though memory cards can fit thousands of photos, no one wants to spend thirty minutes on a single landscape image — especially when it might not turn out well. Once you start searching for the absolute best image quality, you rapidly begin to change the fundamental way that you take pictures, and not in a positive way.
So, “quick” camera settings make it easier to photograph a scene — and, most likely, take many other photos in the same amount of time. Sometimes, as crazy as it sounds, I even put away my tripod when the light is at its best. I then set down my camera bag and run to the best possible location, taking photos from the best vantage point before the light fades away.
Yes, I would prefer to have a photo taken from a tripod. But, in the long run, is there anything wrong with one stop higher ISO, or a slightly wider aperture? I take 95% of my landscape photos with a sturdy tripod, if not more, but there’s always occasion to put it down and run to the best vantage point as fast as possible.
Of course, this isn’t an excuse for photographing everything at the wrong shutter speed, without a tripod, and at bizarre ISO values. Instead, it presents another question. Do you want to take a landscape photo that, in all likelihood, uses settings that will work just fine? Or, do you plan to eke out every possible pixel of image quality for large prints and high-resolution displays?
4) The Effects of Modern Technology
Modern cameras have driven image quality forward throughout the past decade in two main ways: number of pixels and low-light image quality. These two variables may be crucial for your work, or completely unimportant, but there is no doubt that these are the main still-photography features that camera manufactures are interested in iterating. (Matters like dynamic range and color depth are certainly important to camera manufactures, but they aren’t advertised in the same way as pixels and high ISOs.) How does this change the way we look at image quality today? If anything, it makes the two camps even more divided.
For one, it is now much easier for photographers to print high-quality images several feet or meters wide, even without paying thousands of dollars for camera equipment. Until the past five or ten years, that was very difficult. Although 35mm film has a surprising amount of detail, it doesn’t have the same resolution as modern digital sensors. (Film obviously has other advantages for some photographers, of course.)
At the same time, it is easier to carry lightweight camera equipment and shoot at higher ISOs than ever before, still taking relatively high-quality images. If you want to hike up the side of a mountain, mirrorless cameras — and even some point-and-shoots — have incredible quality today.
So, where does this leave us? It’s easier to take ridiculously-high-quality photos today, but it’s also easier to take “good enough” photos with equipment that is still very lightweight. This is surely a good thing, but it does make our decisions more difficult.
5) Compromise
In the end, everything is a compromise. Image quality is a sliding scale; the more quality you get — typically — the slower you will need to work. Achieving the perfect balance can take years of trial and error, but most photographers find their fit at some point along the way.
My own photography can serve as an example. Surprisingly — or not — I shoot most landscapes on my Nikon D800e at f/11 or f/16. I absolutely understand the effects of diffraction from these settings, but there is a huge benefit: I don’t need to take extra time to check my depth of field for every photo. I already know that I have enough, no matter the landscape.
Why am I willing to make this particular compromise? It’s simple. After printing dozens of my photographs at large sizes, from 24 inches to 60 inches wide, I realized that the difference is too small for me to care. Not everyone will make the same judgement call, but that’s what this ultimately is: a judgement call. An aperture of f/16 adds some pixel-level blur, but it also makes it easier to take more compositions in the same amount of time. Ultimately, I realized, this nets me a greater number of successful photos.
As with everything in photography, the real goal is to go out and answer this “good enough” question yourself. Do you routinely print enormous photos on acrylic? Ideally, you would shoot with a high-resolution camera — even medium format — or perhaps a 4×5 or 8×10 film camera. Do you sell digital downloads of your work at 1920 x 1080 resolution? By all means, get a lightweight camera that makes it easier to reach interesting places.
That’s why today is such a good time to be taking pictures. As much as we like to find fault with new cameras and lenses, the fact is that we have more options than ever before. In everything from cameras to tripods, manufacturers offer an incredible range of options: price, size, image quality, and every other possible variable.
Although too many choices can make our decisions more difficult, it also means that we are able to take the photos we want with much less compromise than in the past. As a community, that is something we should embrace to its fullest.
Someone should get out and see the amount and type of gear that is used by professional wildlife photographers … not only many cameras and many lenses, some of them extremely specialised, but remote controls, protective housings, lighting, mini-railways for camera movements, an assortment of tools (even including welding gear!), and often a team of helpers too.
The individual cannot begin to compete no matter what equipment they carry, except by finding a very specialised niche and being the best in it.
Betty – Good posts. We’re of like mind on these issues
Spot On , ZeroVc.
“Do you want to take a landscape photo that, in all likelihood, uses settings that will work just fine? ”
Yes.
I’m a landscape centric photographer. I use one camera (a Nikon D 7000), and carry just two lens (using just one of them the vast majority of the time). I normally use a tripod only when using my Lee filters or when the shutter speed requires. My goal is to take pictures that will require the minimum of processing using LR. I don’t use PS.
I can’t remember anyone who sees or buys my printed pictures who has opined about the camera settings or processing details of the photograph. This is not to say I’m that good at taking photographs, rather it is to say that most people just don’t care about the details. They don’t examine the photographs with a magnifying lens, and they don’t say that had I used ISO 400 or used f5.6 they would like the photograph more than they do.
Great article Spencer, thanks.
Thank you, Hanna, glad you liked it!
The mass decline of photographic standards combines inevitably with the mass increase of photographs taken. The dumbing down of photography is our future as ‘good enough’ is all that the majority knows or cares about. Photography is dead long live the snapshot, unfortunately.
I think just the opposite. I think digital photography is akin to the printing press! And, in time the millions more people that now have access to it will bring about a much more literate photography populace. Is Steven Hawkins somehow less brilliant because technology allows him to do what he otherwise would be unabe to do?
Well said. There may be more “noise” now than ever before, but there are also a greater number of people who truly take the time to get their photos right.
The weight of evidence contradicts that. Mass populations didn’t become literate because of the printing press, most remained illiterate long after printing was invented; they became literate because of social and economic change.
By and large the population at large tends to choose the cheapest, easiest and most convenient option – in other words the lowest common denominator rules.
Look at the rise of the camera phone, MP3 and DAB audio, fast food, flat pack furniture, jerry built houses, cattle class flights…for the most part people want it cheap and they want it now, irrespective of merit, quality or efficacy.
Appreciation of, and usually the ability to pay for, high quality (however we might define it) is generally a minority sport.
Oh and Steven Hawkins had one of the best educations available on the planet and studied and researched his subject for decades… nothing quick or easy there. The fact that he had the benefit of technology is a bit of a red herring as most of his work was/is theoretical (maths and quantum physics), but even given that, learning enough to be able to use technology or imterpret its results at that level is a feat in itself.
I couldn’t have put it better myself. Well said Betty.
Betty,
I think your entire response is a red herring… You have set up a straw man of the masses wanting cheap and easy and shot him dead.
Yeah the printing press had nothing at all to do with the masses gaining access to the printed word! how could I be so foolish!
And Yes Steven had the “education!” He minored in staying alive with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis don’t you know and sprinkled in
some extra courses; How to communicate with a voice synthesizer 101, and Eating with no hands 100…
When technology allows for the spread of human creativity, you get more widespread creativity…period.
Duffy
Duffy
“When technology allows for the spread of human creativity, you get more widespread creativity…period”
No, not really. When technology allows for the spread of ‘human creativity’ more and more humans without an ounce of creativity in their bodies feel ever increasingly empowered to swamp the world with their self admiring and pretentious garbage…period.
And that swamping contains more total great art than without it. You just have to sift more… Good luck!
Duffy
You’re the one who needs the luck for sifting through the mountain of crap in the dim hope of uncovering a pearl…Good luck!
Can’t say much for your style Betty, but I do respect your intelligence…
Well thanks Duffy, that’s the nicest compliment I’ve had today.?
Hi Spencer,
I love your images because of their technical quality AND because of what you were thinking…So there!
Imagine a graph of technical quality/effort needed crossed with one for technical quality/enjoyment. Wherever they intersect is your sweet spot.
Sometimes I push the envelope and sometime I just click quick and “take a shot!” 8^)
I use a D810 and excellent lenses, because I want the possibility of extremely high quality to be available to me always, but I also just enjoy the feel of it in my hands when I’m walking around having fun!
Thanks as always for you fresh perspectives. My world is improved with your articles!
Duffy
Thank you for the very kind comment, Duffy!
You make a good point – all of this also depends upon the particular day you decide to shoot. Sometimes, I have a plan in mind to take focus-stacked photos that have been exposed perfectly to the right. Other days, as Daniel says in a comment above, it’s “f/16 and be there!”
This is my opinion; the most important thing in any photo is the subject matter, composition, atmosphere and emotion. Probably the most important of these qualities is the one that stimulates an emotion.
You may have the most perfectly taken photo but without all or most of these it will be just another photo, maybe not worth taking.
To get the qualities I mentioned you don’t need high resolution, perfect sharpness, exposure, lowest ISO, etc. Too many so called photographers pixel nit pick rather than look at the photo as a whole; does it tell a story?
Good article which I enjoyed reading but I’d rather see a photo that stirred something within me than one that was pixel perfect – so a photo can be good enough and also excellent!
Composition, emotion, light, color, subject matter… All of these are what really make a photo succeed. Thanks for adding this.
Great photos Spencer!
Thank you, Motti! These are all from the recent Photography Life landscape video trip. It has been very fun looking back through and editing everything :)
Many people, many opinions. Cannot be agree with “always exposure to the right”. This is not a dogma. I have many many situations when i have to underexposure -0.3 -.07 and even more. If not too much, this will have only positive effect. Noise? Again, if not too much, then no more than in normal conditions of shooting. The “current lightning conditions” factor is a king.
Hi ANH, thanks for the comment. We covered most of what you’re saying in our article on exposing to the right. More often than you might think, you’ll need to dial negative exposure compensation in order to expose to the right. All that ETTR means is that you have the brightest possible exposure that doesn’t blow out any important highlights. Assuming this – that no important highlights are blown out – this method always produces the greatest amount of recoverable image data in a single shot.
There are reasons that you wouldn’t want to expose to the right, of course. I covered them in the ETTR article. But, for landscapes at base ISO without moving subjects, ETTR is the best exposure. The only case where you shouldn’t use it for such photos – as this article covers – is when you need to work quickly!