That is your 'take' on the subject. Its an art form, and as such, the end product is what the 'artist' decides it is going to be. Potaytoes/potahtos--Aint life grand, that we all have personal choice!For those of you who may have seen me around, you would know that from the questions I ask, I am relatively new to the B&W film photography scene and that I am also a digital refugee(of sorts, as I do still shoot digital, but that's not the point).
I also have to admit, that the first thing I tend to do when playing with a print is set the colour head to give me a grade 3 contrast....again, not the point.
But of late, when looking at pictures online in various forums (& flickr) that the general perception (which is from 95% digital shooters) is for a Black and White image to be good, it must be black of blacks black and white of white whites with no tones in between.
My goal is to get nice images that have a nice tonal range (which I must admit is harder then it sounds!), but for others it appears that there is "not enough contrast"?
Am I just in a foul mood because my digi shooter friends don't think much of my prints? Or is this a trend that is starting to be born by the over cooked images that I see on the net all the time......
Actually, we say 'spuds' at our house-- But you get the pointOT: No-one says 'potah-toes'!
I'm wholeheartedly with Hoffy here. I agree that each one of us (and THEM!) has its vision, but there's more to it. I believe the "digital onslaught" has subtly but deeply changed (or destroyed) the perception of beauty....
.... they're simply black pools. 99,9% of digital, crest of the wave, trendy shooters are just uncapable of perceiving the difference. That's the point. After we talk the same language, then we can say that both trends are valid.
Secondary rant over
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