How do I get started with building and architecture photography? Seems like a cool, interesting field.I don't mean "how do I build a clientbase" or any of that monetary faggotry, I mean purely artistically[EXIF data available. Click here to show/hide.]Camera-Specific Properties:Image-Specific Properties:Image OrientationTop, Left-Hand
>>4399067>take camera>find cool building>shoot[EXIF data available. Click here to show/hide.]Camera-Specific Properties:Equipment MakeNikonCamera ModelNikon SUPER COOLSCAN 4000 EDCamera SoftwareAdobe Photoshop Lightroom Classic 14.1.1 (Windows)Image-Specific Properties:Horizontal Resolution240 dpiVertical Resolution240 dpiImage Created2025:01:13 09:07:24Color Space InformationsRGB
>>4399069>actually go outside and take photosFar beyond /p/
>>4399067something about perspective distortion and correcting for that I unno
>>4399067Get a tit shit lens, bc you can dick about in photoshop straightening your vertical lines, but you’ll still need to know how to use one in the field, esp when you have to splice a few wides together vertically, which happens frequently.Then get good at bracketing and retouch. Then get good at managing designers, building managers, assistants who can carry furniture up & down flights of stairs, and learn how to light indoor scenes by using lighting complimentary to the natural light of the scene. There’s a fucking ton to it.
>>4399082(Whether you intend to make money or not, this is the work you end up doing to get good shots & git gud
>>4399082Actual sound advice. Tilt shift lens or adapters used to use make cringe pictures are made to straighten perspective. Photoshop/lightroom corrections often look uncanny. Next level is lf camera with movements in all axis. But then you have to develop lf which is a bitch if you don't have expansive day tanks and scan it which is also quite endeavour if you don't have flatbed that makes 4x5 or 8x10. But then again can't beat lf resolution.