copake_ham
Member
Haaang onaminut. I'm not "denegrating" the accomplished. I'm pointing out the fact that most people these days looking at a start in photography have this point of view. This is the struggle film faces. Cudos to those that have embraced and mastered the realm of Photoshop (I'll be the first to say it's an extremely complex tool), but do you think that these masters of the digital realm can be lured back to film? They've made the move forward as they see it. More and more people are going in that direction because it is perceived as easier. How many people do you know actually "master" Photoshop? I would bet that the majority of weekend warriors muck around and come up with something they can be proud of. If you read my posts, you and I seem to be arguing the same side of this discussion- no need to get hostile.
Where we disagree is in the generalization that people are lazier now than in the past. I think that is just plain wrong.
The vast majority of today's "lazy digiusers" are shooting P&S's. These folk were just as lazy when they were dropping cannisters into film P&S's!
As to how many folk do I know who master PS? Simply put, how many film shooters ever master (or even enter) a darkroom! I never have.
Processing, be it analog or digital, has always been a "minority" interest within the overall world of photography. In fact, I'd be more likely to use PS than learn wet DR at this stage in life. I still have to work every day - so just finding time to shoot is hard enough.
I prefer film over digital by many magnitudes - but I think it is wrong to characterize those who are of an opposite mind as being lazy. And I also think that if you really believe that the solution to saving film photography is to get kids into the darkroom - then film really is dead. Even at the height of usage only a very few people processed their own - why would they want to do so now?