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I'm interested in the creative control a digital neg can give a platinum printer. Dodging and burning as well as tonal contro is a whole lot easier on a computer. Am I wrong?
I'm interested in the creative control a digital neg can give a platinum printer. Dodging and burning as well as tonal contro is a whole lot easier on a computer. Am I wrong?
I don't find dodging and burning to be any easier on a computer.
Spotting? That definitely is easier!
Of course it is. And that's probably the reason why many argue against it. If it is not a difficult analogue process and doesn't involve torture, it's just not pure enough. I can make a good traditional print but I'm not that stuck in my purist ways to deny that a hybrid process does facilitate (and enable) certain steps in regards to alt process and even silver printing.
My basic point is: any forum has some lines in the sand somewhere. Just set a clear line on the sand. Instead of saying: "this forum is not devoted to hybrid techniques" it could be said, in the printing section: "this forum is devoted to traditional printing techniques and numeric post-processing techniques fall outside of the forum scope".
APUG.ORG is an international community of like minded individuals devoted to traditional (non-digital) photographic processes.
There is a real difference between 'not liking digital' and 'not wanting to talk about it here on APUG'.
I like both Italian food and Mexican food.
If I am in the mood for a burrito I should probably go to my favorite Mexican food restaurant, not my favorite Italian food restaurant. I wouldn't expect the Italian food restaurant to make me burritos; they don't have the right tools or ingredients to do it right.
I find it easier because you can un-dodge. But I've never printed platinum, but is dodging and burning even possible in a contact frame? You do have plenty of time in the sun or uv light source. I've seen printing frames that use masks for that, but they're expensive and cumbersome.
There is a real difference between 'not liking digital' and 'not wanting to talk about it here on APUG'.
I like both Italian food and Mexican food.
If I am in the mood for a burrito I should probably go to my favorite Mexican food restaurant, not my favorite Italian food restaurant. I wouldn't expect the Italian food restaurant to make me burritos; they don't have the right tools or ingredients to do it right.
But while the image is in the digital realm, there is intense pressure to use tools to modify the image (the dodge and burn wands issue). Here there is a risk you will make the final print "better" than a traditional alt process print would have been in the old days.
I would miss the charming dust, hairs and scratches if you removed them.
I've been in the software engineering business continuously since May of 1986. That's 26+ years of weathering more rapid changes in digital technology than you could ever imagine. In fact, many of you out there have used software I've written and you don't even realize it. I think I have a pretty good big-picture feel for what the crutch of digitalization has done to society and those in it. And it's not a very pretty picture.
Many of you out there who say you just can't wait to embrace ever more computer-created abstractions in place of the inconvenient real-world realities you used to be forced to deal with - and eventually master - need to take a deep breath and make absolutely certain you know what it is you're really asking for. And what getting your wish means.
You might think that a mouse click in the umpteenth iteration of some image control application is the supreme act of creativity. But in reality the only choices you have are when and how many times to click. And even those are often tightly beyond your control. It's the hundreds of thousands of man-hours of design, implementation, testing, and upgrading by small armies of programmers that ultimately determine the extent of that mouse click's creativity. Your contribution begins and end with that click. Once the click event reaches the application event handler all you can do from that point on is sit and watch. And hope.
If you subsequently find you don't like the results of your creative mouse click, you're only choice is to seek out another image control application to try. And hope that that group of programmer's approach to abstracting the traditional photographic process is closer to what you want. If it is, great, you're "creative" again. If it isn't, damn, your screwed. Again.
Never forget that at its core the whole idea behind the process of digitalization is to at some level create a virtual version of something that used to be real. An email that was once a hand-written letter to a loved one. A "friend" that used to be a friend. A robot to build cars that used to be a human. A white rectangle on your monitor that used to be a piece of typing paper. Or a TIFF file representation of an algorithm that used to be a silver negative.
All of these abstractions are much easier, cheaper, and more convenient to deal with in a digital computer than to deal with in the real world. But is that what you really, really want in the long run?
Are your sure?*
Ken
*
I'm interested in the creative control a digital neg can give a platinum printer. Dodging and burning as well as tonal contro is a whole lot easier on a computer. Am I wrong?
Ken
When I sit in front of my computer with PS active I thank all those developers who made such an incredible program.. Yes I know it boils to on/off.
But when I see the red ruby mask pop up to hold back areas I smile.
When I can adjust my brush size and opacity I smile
When I see colour corrections to local areas of the image I smile
When I can make the image dance I smile
A program is only as good as the operator.
and lest I forget , 20 years ago I thanked my lucky stars guys like PE were on quality control making the film and emulsions ..
As mentioned before, I've just finished a photogravure workshop. It involved making digital negatives, but it still took me two days to come up with a final print, which is the result of me working with my hands and chemicals to make it happen. After five 12 hr days, my body was in pain. Hardly a simple digital task.
Should the accommodation and integration of digital techniques by analog film and process users continue, then the fears that Thomas Bertilsson expressed about the loss of analog processing skills and knowledge are likely to come to pass sooner rather than later. That's certainly not a way to promote knowledge of darkroom skills, and it is counterproductive to efforts to spread and grow that knowledge and skill.
I can understand what you have said, but fail to understand how stopping the discussion of hybrid methods here in APUG drives that one way or the other.
A much more positive approach is to take measures to educate the young about the excitement of seeing an image develop up in a tray for the first time. In another thread I suggested "If you want to encourage film use, have you considered being a photography merit badge counselor for the Boy Scouts? See http://meritbadge.org/wiki/index.php/Photography for the US description." There are many opportunities like this.
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