In my photography my oeuvre is visible and the same in any of the formats I work in, being 35mm (a format I used and refined skills and visualisation with over many decades) and medium format (6x6 pinhole and 6x7). Introducing a larger format e.g. LF (which I do have but rarely use now) did not and will not change anything from my long-established approach and methodology; if anything, unpacking the thing, sorting film holders, setting up etc — that is what slows things down, and all that fussing and fiddling is definitely not something I want in my well-known line of work of photographing in drenched and dripping rainforests!
Too many of the works I have seen coming from large format — 4x5 (especially), 8x10, 11x14 (and bigger, too) etc., have been very lacklustre, dull, bland and unserviceable — generally deficient in insight and execution of reading and interpreting a scene
with the camera, not through it. Hobbyist stuff rather than serious work that commands intellect and justification of the format. It does strike me as being peculiar to spend comparatively huge amounts of money on such a format, only to print to postcard size! I can think of some of Tim Rudman's prints (among legions of others) being in this category. We're not in the 19th century. Granted, a few practitioners certainly do print larger, but this repeating motif of tiny prints coming from large format cameras doesn't sit well with me. If I presented a postcard-sized print to a client, I would expect blowback.
What I mean is in my estimation most people will do better photography (and even prints) with smaller formats,
There's much that could be read into that.
I had been printing from 35mm (
Ilfochrome Classic, then RA4 and latterly giclée for decades before my jump to MF and printing from there too. That came with the revelation, of sorts, of printing much bigger still, and another revelation that it is 3x more expensive to fully frame larger prints than those I routinely made on 35mm! I would not say my prints from 35mm are especially better than those from 6x6 or 6x7, or for that matter, the other way around. Each format has its particular 'presence' to the viewer, and what is critically more important is the knowledge, interpretation and execution of the subject, not the format. I have not once been asked, from memory, of the type of format my photographs are made from. If they see one of the cameras, an educated person will know, or it will be explained to them. Yes, a Pentax 67 has been mistaken as a "35mm camera on steroids!".