Biff da bear at an automatic espresso maker -for the Technical Talk Blog Series.

Andrew Moor Photography Technical Blog

This Blog is more in-depth look and image-making and image printing. The articles are more focused on the technical practice of photography and may be be borrowed / cited from other sources, with the ideal of factual learning in mind. I might even throw in a diagram or two. Hopefully you get something out of this that you can carry over into your photography practice and help with good, quality results. For this Blog we are bringing out the REALLY GOOD coffee machine for some good discussions.

Introducing the New Blog

Biff da bear at an automatic espresso machine - for technical article header.

Welcome to the Tech Talk blog on my page.

Why this Blog?

We all have questions and as photographers, sometimes you feel a knowledge gap between image taking and image production. 

As part of my personal journey as a photographer there are always questions I have wrangled with in terms of producing large-format images. 

A lot of articles and people out there seem to be directed at answering these, and I found more than anything it led into a sales funnel. Fair enough, but did it actually answer my technical question? Not really. Part of the journey is knowing what questions to ask and what you can add to your photography practice from there.

What to Expect?

Here I will put together the questions I have asked, some questions you have asked, what the answers I got meant to what I have learned on my journey, the research I have done, the source category and specifics, and where to get fairly factual information about what some of the tech we are using can do.

This blog is therefore a link between the camera companies, the software, the conversion to print files, that are actually out there, what printing companies are -trying- to tell you, and some of the miracles and magic that happens between your photo upload and the item delivered to your door.

Also, hopefully, some explainers as to why you have the -best- photo in the world, but you are disappointed when you get that 3 foot by 6 foot canvas print of it, or you might even be told your print size is too big.

I also HIGHLY encourage you to ask away with any questions and we can have a look at the answers together.

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