I often go out with a 35mm SLR around my neck. By now I am well accustomed to complete strangers asking all manner of questions...as I'm sure all of you are too...
"Is that a film Camera?"
"Can you still get film for that?"
"Is that a black and white camera?" ---- yes, people really ask me this.
"Why don't you go digital?"
I occasionally get the devout digital imager that, essentially, informs me that they went digital, I should too, I'm dumb if don't ...but this doesn't really seem to happen too much any more.
This past weekend I experienced a new one...I was out in the woods and a digital imager confronted me. He asserted (wasn't asking but telling ) that...
"You cannot get film for that anymore."
"You cannot get it processed anymore."
I was just so blown away, I didn't even know what to say....I just shrugged my shoulders and said, "good to know. Thanks." and walked away.
jtk and BrianShaw
While I think both are important questions, I think its more important that someone use a camera, any kind
the other stuff matters but not as much as seeing.
Using a camera isnt "photography" and Photrios Media suggests "seeing" is often nearly absent.
Yes, of course.BrianShaw
While I think both are important questions, I think its more important that someone use a camera, any kind
the other stuff matters but not as much as seeing.
And making prints somehow is different ?
YES.
Why is that ?
Can you clarify
Nobody discovered a treasure trove of memories on a hard drive in Aunt Matilda's attic. You've got to have prints in a box.I could care less how other people prefer their final product. To each his own. But for me, I very nearly lost a decade’s worth of precious family photos, even though they were backed up redundantly. Now I have my prints stored in a box in my closet. They are not the darkroom prints of purists, but they ARE the type of prints that will survive a hard drive failure or two.
At the risk of descending into the morass of US partisan politics, I expect that there are a few US voters who looked on the discovery of Anthony Weiner's laptop hard drive as being a discovery of a "treasure trove".Nobody discovered a treasure trove of memories on a hard drive in Aunt Matilda's attic.
Nobody discovered a treasure trove of memories on a hard drive in Aunt Matilda's attic. You've got to have prints in a box.
I found a treasure trove of photographs on old and discarded Bart Simpson thumb drive >?<Nobody discovered a treasure trove of memories on a hard drive in Aunt Matilda's attic. You've got to have prints in a box.
Digital images require alibis / labels to be appreciated them, so one can see someone's competency with a camera???Prints don't require alibis (such as labels).....prints do demonstrate one's competence and values, which can be legitimately addressed and evaluated.
as the bible says " woe be unto those that debase the past for the sake of the new, they will be smitten and struck down!" -James 23Why is that ?
Can you clarify?
Do the prints have to be made by oneself on an ink or pigment printer?
For years snobs say that people who don't make their own prints aren't "real photographers"...
.
John 7:24as the bible says " woe be unto those that debase the past for the sake of the new, they will be smitten and struck down!" -James 23
Nobody discovered a treasure trove of memories on a hard drive in Aunt Matilda's attic. You've got to have prints in a box.
Generally, I would agree with this, however, a couple of weeks ago I took the first digital camera I ever owned out of its storage box. Inside was an 8 MB (not GB!) compact flash card with 2 dozen photos from the early part of this Century that I did not know about.
Photography deniers? I deal with them by saving that I make physical pictures out of light sensitive substances. This is incomparably different to displaying a picture on a telephone...which isn't photography anyway, so there.
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