The difference is - the analogue industry began to face the consequences of environmental problems as it became aware of them/was confronted by them, while the digital industry sometimes did, and sometimes offloaded them to other locations.
Liquid Light uses gelatin.I'm not real happy that film emulsions are made from the bones and hooves of murdered animals, but since those animals were slaughtered for their flesh, the gelatin is a by product. I'm hoping to remove myself from that on the printing end by going to prints made from Liquid Light on traditional rag paper. The only way I see to avoid the other end is by using paper negatives.
But it's all too convenient that the top 5 reason why people shoot digital over film, somewhere in that top 5, chemicals come up.
Liquid Light uses gelatin.
Casual image creators, think young people with cell phones, create an image, get the emotional satisfaction and move on. This simply wasn't possible before, so the effect couldn't really have been well predicted. As we see, that momentary emotional satisfaction is all most people want from an image.
Back in the 19th century when photos were rare and expensive, and transportation and communications were slow or impossible, photographs were treasured mementoes of people who might never be seen again because of accident, distance or disease.
In the 20th century, with automobiles, phones, planes and modern medicine, it gradually became easier and easier to predictably keep in touch. Photos were cheap and easy to make and started to accumulate in shoe boxes, rarely seen and often forgotten.
Now in the 21st century, transportation is fast, communication is non-stop and people can routinely be kept alive and functional for decades beyond the historical norm. Seeing, recording and transmitting still and moving images is effortless, continuous and practically cost-free. Few people bother to print out their personal pictures because each day another dozen or even hundreds of high-quality still and moving snapshots can be instantly posted to a Facebook or Instagram page to be shared with a torrent of competing images from friends and family.
Each day another batch of old pictures scrolls down into the digital shoebox at the bottom of the screen, never to be seen again. Who needs to reminisce about what happened yesterday or last month when there's always something new to look at? Perhaps our ancestors would have been similarly cavalier about their photos if they had access to the technologies we take for granted.
Maybe it's just human nature to be focussed on the present. Perhaps the appreciation of photographs as historical or artistic objects is just a curious by-product of a passing age that some of us cling to out of cultural habit. Try to imagine life without physical photographic images of the past. That's the way people lived for millions of years before 1839, and the future will have some similarities.
I remember the methylene chloride witch hunt pretty well. Although a lot of it is a bad thing, what the Plumbers Union did is get word out how plastic water pipe was carcinogenic due to methylene chloride, as well as capable of producing toxic gas if your house caught fire. Of course, all your vinyl furniture, shoes, carpet padding, etc etc etc produce toxic fumes too. And being in a burning house isn't a good idea anyway. And of course, it was perfectly fine if the water district used plastic pipe outside the house, which they often do; somehow it only magically becomes carcinogenic within your house when it becomes easier to install than sweating copper pipe and takes jobs away from the plumbers. Then people panicked about methylene chloride paint stripper because it is a suspected carcinogen. So what was the result? People who made strippers simply removed this suspected carcinogen and substituted known carcinogens or nasties like toluene and benzene. Why settle for less than the read deal? Or people started using torches to strip paint and got the best of both worlds - inhaling lead paint fumes as well as a burned down house from time to time. Oh the stories I could tell!
People who made strippers simply removed this suspected carcinogen and substituted known carcinogens or nasties like toluene and benzene.
There was a huge whoopee-ding-dong investigative report on the news last week which caused a bit of panic. Somebody found out toothpaste
contained a "paint chemical" called titanium dioxide!!!!!! Guess nobody has bothered to read the label on ordinary table salt for the last few
decades, which routinely contains titanium dioxide whitener.
I've said before that one group lists EDTA as highly toxic!
I've seen them go overboard too Drew!
I've said before that one group lists EDTA as highly toxic!
PE
Digital is as harmful or more so than analog, due to the heavy use of toxic materials in making the sensors. Look up my previous detailed posts on this topic.
PE
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