
Originally Posted by
Doug Brown
You make some valid points Don. But you need a common language in order to teach, and EXIF data is the photographer's language. I agree that there are reasons we choose the settings that we use in a given photograph. When I point out camera setting issues to people who post on Avian, I try to explain why I might approach things a little differently. We are not out in the field on BPN, so teaching techniques have to be adapted to the internet. We get a single frame to work with and that's it; we are glorified Monday morning quarterbacks. When I do workshops, I use a teaching style not unlike the one you describe. But on the forums it's a different story.
If you see a soft flight image, it could be that focus wasn't locked on the subject at the time of image capture. Or it could be that there wasn't enough shutter speed to freeze the bird. Without EXIF data we can't easily figure out what was going on. It is not at all uncommon to see novice photographers trying to shoot BIF at ISO 100. How do I tell them to bump the ISO to 400 for BIF if I have no idea what ISO they are using?
EXIF data is just one piece of the photographic puzzle, but it's an important piece.