elmontanero
Member
This topic has returned to me recently. I've returned to the Dark after 11years away, and I couldn't be more pleased with all that has come with it. Frustrating negatives, endless prints and problems, film transport problems with old cameras.
I'm also a working photographer that has his hand in digital when called to jobs. Two gigs recently that required me to complete them quickly and get fast turn over of the work for the clients. And I'm a high school photography teacher teaching both art and commercial courses.
At work and the school we have no option for darkrooms right now. It's been talked over at the school - even some support from the powers that be but no room or water out provisions. I don't really think when I do much of the digital work. It's work much like cleaning my house, "Okay, good that's done, it looks fine." But when I think about photography - I think in terms of what camera, what film, what lens- all of it traditionally now. I think about film lenses and what ones I'd like to have for a vision I'd like to complete.
There are still photographers using film - and using it well. I'm not sure it has to be relegated to the art schools. My students were working with lighting and imitating the masters.. They'd shoot/test/correct the details and then take their photo digitally... then I'd slip a Medium Format film camera in place on the tripod - the students would get quiet, they'd concentrate more than I've ever seen them do before. They'd make their adjustments, set exposure and focus manually and then be told, "you get only one shot."
They were transfixed when the Contact sheets came back, I printed the best of the pics to a simple 8x10. The students all wanted theirs printed too. Never the same as with digital. It might be an occasion within a professional curriculum, but I believe it's one that should not be overlooked. My professional work is much, much better when I'm working with film in my personal work.
I'm also a working photographer that has his hand in digital when called to jobs. Two gigs recently that required me to complete them quickly and get fast turn over of the work for the clients. And I'm a high school photography teacher teaching both art and commercial courses.
At work and the school we have no option for darkrooms right now. It's been talked over at the school - even some support from the powers that be but no room or water out provisions. I don't really think when I do much of the digital work. It's work much like cleaning my house, "Okay, good that's done, it looks fine." But when I think about photography - I think in terms of what camera, what film, what lens- all of it traditionally now. I think about film lenses and what ones I'd like to have for a vision I'd like to complete.
There are still photographers using film - and using it well. I'm not sure it has to be relegated to the art schools. My students were working with lighting and imitating the masters.. They'd shoot/test/correct the details and then take their photo digitally... then I'd slip a Medium Format film camera in place on the tripod - the students would get quiet, they'd concentrate more than I've ever seen them do before. They'd make their adjustments, set exposure and focus manually and then be told, "you get only one shot."
They were transfixed when the Contact sheets came back, I printed the best of the pics to a simple 8x10. The students all wanted theirs printed too. Never the same as with digital. It might be an occasion within a professional curriculum, but I believe it's one that should not be overlooked. My professional work is much, much better when I'm working with film in my personal work.