Pieter12
Member
I guess no-one had her contact information. Or knew of her.Well none of us asked her to join us, so the blame is all on us.
I guess no-one had her contact information. Or knew of her.Well none of us asked her to join us, so the blame is all on us.
Your father was generous. Most who sell things like that do not accept returns.
I guess no-one had her contact information. Or knew of her.
I guess no-one had her contact information. Or knew of her.
She might have been a lurker. Perhaps she would have joined if @Sirius Glass had posted some photos.
Pixel wars ended a while back. Now they've declared war on mirrors and the mirrors seem to have lost before the battle was even fought.
Ve con Dios Pentax.
I know. When I eventually get something mirrorless I'll still be well behind the curve, but I'm not bothered.
Latest and greatest has always been phooey to me - I've always regarded most current (as in, current at the time) cameras as nothing more than male jewellery.
I haven't been down to Glazers in Seattle since before Covid 19. I wonder what the film and darkroom section is like now - at one time it was wonderful, then when they moved to their new premises it shrunk considerably.
What is it about film that involves the element of luck that is not present with digital?“There's something about the luck with film that you can't necessarily get with digital, no matter how much you edit,” says Ajay Gallardo[/I]
What is it about film that involves the element of luck that is not present with digital?
A few I can think of on top of my head -
-variance in colour performance as a function of age of the film (colours interpreted by a CCD or CMOS sensor don't vary as a function of sensor's age)
-variance in macro-contrast as a function of development time
-variance in micro-contrast as a function of development type
-variance in grain morphology as a function of development type
-variance of tone as a function of the non-linearity of the inversion curve chosen.
-variance in results based on the age of the chemistry (think small external lab using spent C41 vs pro lab with good turnaround)
You can decide to control all of the above, or you can decide to let some, or all, of the above loose ('luck'). Letting some of the above parameters loose is done sometimes out of ignorance, sometimes on purpose, even by extremely talented photographers, as a vehicle to channel creativity.
This is just a start of course.
What is it about film that involves the element of luck that is not present with digital?
With digital, the moment after you press the shutter button, you can view the image and see if it is correctly composed, exposed, and if it is to your liking.
With film, the luck part is some or all of the following:
Then you have the home developing of the film:
- Was the camera loaded with film.
- Was the film loaded correctly and did it wind on.
- Were the correct aperture and shutter speed selected.
- Was the correct ASA/ISO set
- Was the camera back opened mid roll
- Was there any obstruction in the image path in the camera.
- Add your own here.
Feel free to add to the list.
- Was the film loaded correctly onto the developing spiral.
- Was the changing bag/darkroom light tight.
- Was the pre wash necessary
- Was the developer exhausted/expired.
- Was fix poured into the developing tank first.
- Was indicator stop too expensive.
- Was using a squeegee, the work of Satan.
- Add you own here.
I never realized film development was such a crapshoot.
It is. Plenty of sources of variability. Do you shoot film?
With film, the luck…
For fifty years. You are confusing luck with variability. Like you said, you can control for variability.
As stated, you might decide to surrender control for creative purposes.
Also I'm not confusing anything. I didn't say I agree with the above. You are shooting the messenger. I'm just trying to help you understand.
With digital, the moment after you press the shutter button, you can view the image and see if it is correctly composed, exposed, and if it is to your liking.
With film, the luck part is some or all of the following:
Then you have the home developing of the film:
- Was the camera loaded with film.
- Was the film loaded correctly and did it wind on.
- Were the correct aperture and shutter speed selected.
- Was the correct ASA/ISO set
- Was the camera back opened mid roll
- Was there any obstruction in the image path in the camera.
- Add your own here.
Feel free to add to the list.
- Was the film loaded correctly onto the developing spiral.
- Was the changing bag/darkroom light tight.
- Was the pre wash necessary
- Was the developer exhausted/expired.
- Was fix poured into the developing tank first.
- Was indicator stop too expensive.
- Was using a squeegee, the work of Satan.
- Add you own here.
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