What people don't realize is that 35mm film has the equivalent of something like 40 megapixels of resolution.
Film, in general can capture a dynamic range of something like ±20 stops. (Correct me if this is wrong.)
There is no digital technology that can come close to that.
The best digital cameras which cost thousands of dollars are producing just over 20 megapixels right now. Correct? The dynamic range of a digital camera is an order of magnitude smaller.
We have photographs which are more than 100 to 150 years old.
There is just no way to say that digital photographs have anywhere near that level of permanence unless they are printed on archival media.
I'm sorry but nothing digital can ever hold a candle to what can be done with film.
We can start with the differences between a random grain image and a Cartesian arrangement of pixels.
The human eye responds to each of them in a different way. Most people will tolerate much more grain in a photographic film image than they will tolerate pixelation or macroblocking in a digital image.
One frame of film can capture more than a multiple exposure HDR can capture. [...] It is probably possible to produce a digital image that looks as good as a frame of film but you would have to either use multiple exposures of the same scene.
Luckily, we don't have to worry about nitrate stock very much anymore.
If you take care of your photos they will last longer than your lifetime and, likely your grand children's lifetimes.
First off, we don't even know how long a digital image can be preserved.
Second, the medium on which we store digital images is very likely NOT up to the task of long-term preservation.
It is very easy to share them among a group of people.
If the electrical grid ever goes down, it will become very difficult, indeed ,to retrieve digital photos.
for quality, longevity and artistic expression I still don't think you can beat film.
You could put a pile of $hit in a box, stamp the word "digital" on it and people would buy it because digital $hit is better than analog $hit.
What people don't realize is that 35mm film has the equivalent of something like 40 megapixels of resolution. Film, in general can capture a dynamic range of something like ±20 stops. (Correct me if this is wrong.) There is no digital technology that can come close to that. The best digital cameras which cost thousands of dollars are producing just over 20 megapixels right now. Correct? The dynamic range of a digital camera is an order of magnitude smaller.
Digital photography does have its benefits. It is easier to do because you don't have to master the darkroom. It is more convenient because you don't have to wait for development. You never have to worry about running out of film. Due to vast economies of scale, prices are falling all the time.
We have photographs which are more than 100 to 150 years old. The vast majority of our digital pictures are less than 1/10 that. There is just no way to say that digital photographs have anywhere near that level of permanence unless they are printed on archival media. You can not count on hard disks and digital memory chips to store photographs for long term. Not only are they just not reliable enough, they become obsolete very quickly. It would be a challenge to retrieve a photograph stored on a floppy disk just a few years ago. If you happen to have a 5-1/4 inch floppy dis, I DARE you to retrieve the data from it today. It would be a challenge! There is just no guarantee that even the best storage medium we come up with in the next few years will be able to match the permanence and longevity that we have been able to achieve with film.
I'm sorry but nothing digital can ever hold a candle to what can be done with film.
Yes, the masses will gravitate toward the convenience and economy of digital photography but I do not think film will ever go away completely.
200 years ago, people who wanted portraits of their family had to hire an artist to paint their portrait. Well, photography has largely supplanted that market but it has not disappeared completely. People who want artistic, life-size renderings of their family and friends STILL turn to portrait painters. (They often work from photographs!) It is more expensive. It is more time consuming and good artists are harder to come by but you can STILL hire a portrait painter.
I think there will still be photography in 100 years. It will be more expensive. Fewer people will know how to do it. But people who want the quality, permanence and emotional realism that film photography can provide will still be able to do it.
In a nutshell, it will go back to being exclusively a rich-man's game.
I told my wife I'd booked a table for Valentines Day, she asked "where are we going for a meal ?", "meal I replied, It's a snooker table !"Okay,
So last night my wife and I went out to Valentine's day dinner.
Slow food, great experience.
Two things (besides being out with my wife) made it really special.
1 - The pace of the meal.
2 - The type of meal.
Did I mention slow. 2 1/2 hours start to finish, 8 or so small courses served one at a time with live music. It started with non-alcoholic Prickly Pear cactus bubbly, included a bread made with cattails, a scrumptious curry soup, a sorbet to die for just before the main course, and ended a chocolate coconut hot toddy. All raw and wild foods, purely vegetarian fare.
The evening was truly special because of it's pace and because it isn't normal.
(Side note - Just for giggles I tried this pace again today with more normal rations while I was working around the house and ate half my normal portions and felt very satisfied.)
The group putting this on is a non-profit and the restaurant is a small but growing concern that helps support the non-profit through good old fashioned capitalism. It is even moving from 2 to 3 days a week open. They teach cooking and about wild food gathering and I don't know what all else.
So what does this have to do with analog photography?
This restaurant is bucking the normal hurry-up trend of our world and riding on the back of the green movement, the back to the land movement, vegetarianism, and good old peace-loving liberal (hippy) thought.
My thought is that analog photography's future success is probably based on the elephants in the room that nobody is talking about, and no I'm not talking about digital, I'm talking about the lack of time we all seem to face and the changes in social interaction/communication.
My question now is "what social trends can we surf on going forward?"
I love and use film as much or more then the next guy, but worker, your post has so many flaws, untruths, and subjective bias and outright lies that I am overwhelmed on how to respond.
I love and prefer film but this fact will not compel me to lie, make up stories and exaggerate the qualities of film and digital mediums; I want to stay objective, factual and fair.
Film and digital are not competitors, nor does one replace the other. Surely you tire from fighting this old battle, with all this religion, emotion, and subjectivity, yea?
1. Film does NOT have 20+ stops of DR. How ridiculous to claim this!
2. There are digital cameras that nearly match B&W film in DR.
3. Like digital photography, a film shooter does not have to master the darkroom. You very conveniently didn't mention this. Film and digital shooters can master the darkroom, taking the process slow and following complex workflows, or the opposite.
4. Film cannot, has never been able, and will never better digital in archival permanence. You don't know computers, how they work, how data is stored because if you did, you would not think film to be a better archival medium. That ridiculous example about pulling data off a 20+ year old floppy disk is very lame because all one has to do is copy that file to newer better medium every 5-7 years, and the cost is extremely cheap, and the amount of "hassle" is less then making a cup of coffee in the morning. Of course the film snobs will drastically exaggerate the cost and hassle of moving files to higher capacity and more dependable, and far cheap media. They think this is "so hard and complex"....lol x 1,000!
5. There are awesome master digital shooters that can create awesome digital pictures, and no less stunning then film shooter results.
Film and digital provide the means to make great awesome art.
I really tire of the tedious lies coming from film and digital snobs equally! Both extremists/fundamentalists are terribly wrong xenophobic, and insecure.
You say digital is safer. Well, check out the following-
1. Doomsday book only lasted 15 years, stored by professionals. http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2002/mar/03/research.elearning
2. Businesses losing billions of dollars (managed by professionals)
Dead Link Removed
And lets remember that losing your accounting records is serious (lots of $), not just your hobby photos. They try their best to protect data, but they still have losses.
The average digital hobbyist will throw his stuff in a drawer like he did his negs and do nothing for 25 years. When it is time for grandchildren to see the images....the negs will be there, the digital data will be lost (not migrated, improperly managed). That is the truth, some of us serious hobbyists may migrate data, but the rest never heard of it, and think a DVD lasts forever. A decade from now, we're going to see a lot of family pictures GONE, and a change in consumer attitudes when that happens.
Saved data can easily have a virus transfered to all your important disks, becoming inoperable. Migrating files works in the short run, not long run. Eventually the software and other systems have a mismatch. For example, I wrote a bunch of financial programs in BASICA 20 years ago. Try loading the BASICA language into XP, VISTA, or a modern Windows 7 machine (it won't accept it...one is 8 bit, other 64 bit)). You can migrate all those programs I wrote, but it won't do you any good.
Film is proven, digital is not. I have negs over 80 yrs old and will still be usable 150 years from now. Office scanners are always needed, and will be even better 150 years from now.
My recommendation is to believe what the statistical reports say, and not comments from non experts in here (due your own research if your photos are important to you). Remember, family photos are a one time deal, and not properly managed at all by the average snapshooter. For these type of people, film is 1000 times safer, you can do NOTHING and pull them from your attack 50 years from now and still use them. It is hard copy. It boils down to a risk, you can believe one way or the other. But starting with film and then digitizing (scanning it) gives you two types of backup (analog and digital). So this makes film the best choice for archival reasons....you then have the best of both.
To many of us are saying that digital is what the commercial guys are using. Well, it is okay for them, car advtg changes yearly, hamburger advtg changes often too....so long term permanence is not a big issue. They have there own set of needs....saving on lab/film costs due to higher volumes, short time frames to get the job done, instant results to avoid reshoots, etc....but long term permanence is not one of them in most cases. Their only interested in NOW, the fastest and cheapest approach. If you have important images you want to keep a long time, or a fine art pro, having film and the scans I believe is the safest method (it's not one or the other).
2. There are digital cameras that nearly match B&W film in DR.
Your post conveniently IGNORES the 99.99% of the others that have never, and will never lose one bit of their account or anything data. The only thing your post does is show that even "pros" can make mistakes and ignore best practices.
Your 99.99% theory is absolutely ridiculous relative to the facts provided (on data loss by business into the billions) in the 2 links given in my previous post. This is hard to dispute, but of course you can ignore it, and everything will be just right if you wish for it.
I am glad you liked the article Van Camper. I thought it was pretty amazing all the stuff they are doing. The world is a funny place because last night my #3 daughter said she was going to apply for a Master's Program at UCLA and major in Library and Archival Science. I just told her to go for it and I got your back. (That means I will pay for it). So in a few years I will have an Archivist in the family. I kind of wanted a Police Officer to arrest my neighbors when they bug me. (LOL) just kidding.
You are correct that the Vatican has money that we cannot have so we just all have to decide what we want to do. Currently I have my negatives and positives and I also have the family pictures which is mostly medium format from about 1900 to 1970 and my own stuff. These days everything I am interested in gets scanned. The 35mm is scanned to about 1.5mb (photo CD's or my V500) and my Nikon D200 is about 7mb and I keep the files in two external hard drives. Also family shots are printed. My landscape pictures hardly get printed anymore because my wife say's there is to much of my stuff hanging anyway.. My #2 daughter is an Artist and is graduating from UC Berkely (go Cal) later this month. My pictures are slowly coming down and the work she gives us is going up. However she is talented and I am just a snapper. She is giving her Mom a Lithograph (deckeld paper) for Mothers Day. I am honored because my daughter is going to let me frame it. That means she thinks I am good at it. I am off work tomorrow so that will be my project. Luckily it involves a trip to Santa Cruz, Ca and a few pictures of something.
When she graduates, I hope she reports back here as to the best solution with respect to archiving. For me, I don't do snaps, my art is important to me, and a digital only solution isn't proven (besides, there is no high-end digital camera that can beat 4x5 or larger sheet film and do it affordably....so film is the ONLY CHOICE for some of us,
Your 99.99% theory is absolutely ridiculous relative to the facts provided (on data loss by business into the billions) in the 2 links given in my previous post. This is hard to dispute, but of course you can ignore it, and everything will be just right if you wish for it.
Bullshit. You understanding nothing about non-linear curves and what makes analog mediums special. Digital cannot offer DR compression and is entirely limited by the raw input to the sensor (try exposing for the shadows and "developing" for the highlights with your silicon wafers). Seriously, look this sh*t up before you get back on here and refute everyone while stroking your 5D - because it's getting old.
Bullshit. I wrote "nearly" not actually? We all agree that film provides wide DR then anything digital. For now.
Seriously, read the posts before you get back on here and refute me, while you're stroking your self - because it's getting old.
I've offered no theories. I only offered facts. If a person uses best practices to archive their digital data, it will far, far out last film negatives.
When a business loses their digital data, this does not prove digital archive is bad. It just proves that that business didn't follow best practices.
I think a lot of film lovers get emotional about film to the point of being subjective, bias, and unrealistic.
I'm not one of these. I shoot 40+ rolls of Tri-X each month, and I cannot remember the last time I picked up my 5D DSLR's, and as much as I love film I'm not going to (1) get subjective with it, (2) lose sight of the prime directive: The Print, and (3) going to turn my love of film into religion.
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