Fixcinater
Member
To directly answer your question in the title, no, it's not necessary. Just like you can make great images with a Holga's plastic lo-fi lens.
I'd say it's down to how you want to communicate with your viewers. Some people's photographs rely on that super high res look to carry the weight of the subject. Some people could use that Holga and the fastest low res scan and make their point. It's fairly easy to chase the resolution/quality, it's much harder (for me and seemingly lots of other photogs) to nail down exactly what they want to say.
I will say, that after a friend give me a drum scanner and getting a bit of the way up the learning curve there, it made me appreciate film more than my flatbed scanner ever could. Having the ability to pull a quality file out of a 6x7 or larger negative (smaller negs look nice and sharp too but the quality differences are much more apparent, so MF and LF really pop) changes the way I make images. If you can get further up the quality curve, you might be able to reduce the quantity. I have, anyway, and I'm at a loss with what to do with the very good 35mm equipment I have lying around here.
I'd say it's down to how you want to communicate with your viewers. Some people's photographs rely on that super high res look to carry the weight of the subject. Some people could use that Holga and the fastest low res scan and make their point. It's fairly easy to chase the resolution/quality, it's much harder (for me and seemingly lots of other photogs) to nail down exactly what they want to say.
I will say, that after a friend give me a drum scanner and getting a bit of the way up the learning curve there, it made me appreciate film more than my flatbed scanner ever could. Having the ability to pull a quality file out of a 6x7 or larger negative (smaller negs look nice and sharp too but the quality differences are much more apparent, so MF and LF really pop) changes the way I make images. If you can get further up the quality curve, you might be able to reduce the quantity. I have, anyway, and I'm at a loss with what to do with the very good 35mm equipment I have lying around here.