Feb 16, 2006, 16:49
There's an insightful article on culling images after a shoot here from Digital Media Thoughts. I think it is interesting that he says:
Another good point he makes:

By the way, one pretty cool piece of software to aid in photo comparison / sorting / culling is Pixort, which I've written an article about...
What about you? What are your culling habits?
Quote:It's my belief that keeping five nearly identical photos foster a pack-rat mentality that holds a photographer back from improving. If you keep all your images, you never have to think about why one is better than the other. That means you never have to look critically at your own photography and learn what types of photos you should be striving for when you bring that camera up to your eye and press the shutter release.I for one admit that I tend to keep almost all except the really bad ones or out of focus ones. I tend to take the "easy way out" - i.e. I delete the ones that are noticably bad, but can't bring myself to critique and eliminate those that are redundant or different ever-so-slightly. I've always convinced myself that photos are precious - you can't go back in time and take the same shot again. Somewhere down the line I may just happen to need a particular image, or even worse I might find a smudge or flaw in the one that I decided to keep...
Another good point he makes:
Quote:I believe that photos tell a story, and in the same way that a good story doesn't repeat the same thing over and over, having near-duplicates of the same image is equally useless. I like to cull my images until I feel the story is as tight and powerful as possible. Great stories have impact, and so should your photos.Makes sense, methinks. Now... to gather the will to press the delete button...

By the way, one pretty cool piece of software to aid in photo comparison / sorting / culling is Pixort, which I've written an article about...
What about you? What are your culling habits?