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Rating: Summary: Lots of digital manipulation and some shocking advice. Review: I borrowed this book from a local library because it was from the Sierra Club. However it was a disappointment. In a book on nature photography from the very well known Sierra Club, one would expect more on field techniques, pointers and tips on photographing your subject. There is some sound advice, but it is surprising to see so much emphasis on digital manipulation. Even the front cover is a fake, two images combined to look like one. This does not depict nature as one sees it, rather, the book tells you how to produce eye catching images. Not something I expected from Sierra Club. The author makes a shocking suggestion - refrigerate your subjects (animals / insects etc) till they can't move, so that they are easy to photograph. It is well known that some people do this, but photographers with any sort of consideration for the environment or their subjects abstain from such methods. As John Shaw says "Imagine refrigerating your kids till they are too cold to move, then photographing them." I find it incredible that someone like Fitzharris would suggest such a thing. The book is worth a read if you find it at your local library, but I wouldn't pay any money for it.
Rating: Summary: Nature photography or digital manipulation? Review: This is a decent book if you are new to the world of macro photography. It certainly doesn't cover in-depth aspects of shooting macro and even devotes a large portion of digitally manipulating images on Adobe Photoshop. For example, the cover is composed of two separate images, the flower and the frog. There's a place for digital manipulation, but I felt disappointed after finding out that some otherwise beautiful images (that would have been spectacular to capture in the wild) were faked. I had higher expectations coming from the Sierra Club.
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