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<blockquote data-quote="lightmuncher" data-source="post: 4525" data-attributes="member: 300"><p>I actually found some old images! Its not until you start assessing these old silver images do you see how clean a digital image is! I remember going to a David Bailey photographic display in Oxford back in the 70's and he was using high grained images. Which many thought of as not good photography. Nowadays, anything goes, which is a better way of being able to express what you want to convey in an image. I had to take pics for the exam and one of the images had to be of people working. I asked the orthodontist if he wouldn't mind if I take pics of him examining a patient. Which was a student nurse, who later chided me for doing it. I had to show her the image, and said we couldn't see her face. This was at the old Nuffield Orthopaedic hospital back in the 70's. They have no use for medical photographers these days sadly, which of course is of no surprise.</p><p></p><p>[ATTACH=full]1570[/ATTACH]</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="lightmuncher, post: 4525, member: 300"] I actually found some old images! Its not until you start assessing these old silver images do you see how clean a digital image is! I remember going to a David Bailey photographic display in Oxford back in the 70's and he was using high grained images. Which many thought of as not good photography. Nowadays, anything goes, which is a better way of being able to express what you want to convey in an image. I had to take pics for the exam and one of the images had to be of people working. I asked the orthodontist if he wouldn't mind if I take pics of him examining a patient. Which was a student nurse, who later chided me for doing it. I had to show her the image, and said we couldn't see her face. This was at the old Nuffield Orthopaedic hospital back in the 70's. They have no use for medical photographers these days sadly, which of course is of no surprise. [ATTACH type="full"]1570[/ATTACH] [/QUOTE]
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