Posted by RR on January 25, 2010 at 23:52:13:
In Reply to: Re: Creativity posted by Lorelei on January 25, 2010 at 22:11:45:
I meant quickly in terms of the growing process and adjusting results. Once you saw the photos, you could adjust how you shot the next roll. If a person draws something and it looks wrong, it's not always easy to figure out how to fix what is wrong without a lot of additional practice. When you look at the distorted anatomy of a child drawing a person, there's no easy way to provide concrete advice to fix what's wrong because the child hasn't yet developed the skills to correct those problems. It might take years to get to that next stage. The technical problems in a bad photo can be more easily corrected--and that makes it easier to focus on the artistic aspects of taking a photograph in an interesting fashion.
With digital photography today, results are indeed instantaneous.
Had you not found an interest in photography, who knows what would have happened with your bondage interests. You would probably never have become a bondage model. It's just as well that you didn't succeed in another artistic outlet.
The mind does boggle at the thought of a ventriloquist act with Lorelei and her gagged dummy. Of course, there's still room for you to create "Bondage: The Musical".