"What a photographer must realize is that his eye and his camera see things differently. Guided by the brain, the eye is selective, whereas the camera records everything within its range. To prove this, make a simple experiment: Ask two friends, a man and a woman, to walk along a street with you. Ask them to take a look at a pretty girl approaching wile you take a candid photograph of her. Then ask them to describe her.
Most likely, the man will have noticed the shape of her legs and figure, the way she moves her hips, and the color of her hair. Whereas the woman more likely paid attention to the way in which she dressed, the color and material of her clothes, her hairdo, and her makeup. And whereas the man may call her attractive, the woman may describe her as overdressed and not particularly attractive. And the paradoxical as it may seem, both will probably be perfectly sincere in their deions which reflect the difference in their respective interests in the girl, the result of the selectivity of brain and eye. "
Most likely, the man will have noticed the shape of her legs and figure, the way she moves her hips, and the color of her hair. Whereas the woman more likely paid attention to the way in which she dressed, the color and material of her clothes, her hairdo, and her makeup. And whereas the man may call her attractive, the woman may describe her as overdressed and not particularly attractive. And the paradoxical as it may seem, both will probably be perfectly sincere in their deions which reflect the difference in their respective interests in the girl, the result of the selectivity of brain and eye. "