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Anonymous
>>231001 Or, use digital.
Take lots of different pictures with different settings when you're not sure what to do (a bracket, basically) and find out what suits you best, AND spend less money overall (not paying for film) - you don't have to practice over and over on limited film, also increasing the chance that you will take more risky, tricky, interesting (and the like) pictures, without worrying thats its basically ruining the precious film 'space'..
All this, of course, for a hobby he could just drop in a couple weeks (/months/etc.)?
IMO, use whatever digital, and go wild - find your own style... You yourself can tell that the picture isn't very artistic, that is important. Try different things then (even just angle/distance, maybe add some elements to the tree [get someone to climb it, and sit up there or something? I dunno]), until you find something that is artistic (in your opinion)... Also, in terms of editing, I think you should try and get the picture you want when you take it, and then correct colours/contrast/some exposure, cropping and the like - it can make a huge difference, but its not gonna to make any old picture amazing.
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