semi-ambivalent
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- Joined
- Mar 26, 2011
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- 733
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- 35mm
I don't know if they allowed this loophole, but I use a digital camera to photograph my prints. That's not a scan.
The submit button isn't there yet, expect Dec 1 2012. I noticed they ask for perpetual non-exclusive rights. And the prizes are all Nikon equipment. Maybe they figure we don't want any of it.
The submit button isn't there yet, expect Dec 1 2012. I noticed they ask for perpetual non-exclusive rights. And the prizes are all Nikon equipment. Maybe they figure we don't want any of it.
The problem is that you simply can not tell if an image was made with Nikon gear using film. That's all.
Well a scanned image will have zero metadata and this is what they'll be looking for.
we should send them a photograph of a nikon dslr,beaten to shreds with a hammer and photographed with a canon film camera
Well a scanned image will have zero metadata and this is what they'll be looking for.
we should send them a photograph of a nikon dslr,beaten to shreds with a hammer and photographed with a canon film camera
I realize it's Nikon and all but I have to ask in all honesty...why is everyone in a lather over this rule ? How will it affect our day to day ? It's just a contest.
But in terms of EXIF, problem solved easily, just scan your slide or neg with a DSLR and macro lens...;-)
I realize it's Nikon and all but I have to ask in all honesty...why is everyone in a lather over this rule ? How will it affect our day to day ? It's just a contest.
It's Nikon's contest so Nikon's rules apply. If you don't like the rules write Nikon and tell them.
we should send them a photograph of a nikon dslr,beaten to shreds with a hammer and photographed with a canon film camera
I've got to say that if I won and all the equipment was given to me, I'd probably end up giving it away to others who want to learn.
A while after my son was born and I had two kids to run around after instead of one, I embraced digital. During the earliest part of their lives, it was just too hard to keep developing film and I couldn't afford to send all the film I was running out to a lab. I got a Digital Rebel and went about relearning how to use photo editing software.
I realized something about six months in, though: I hate it. I actually HATE digital photography. The pictures I have of my kids are awesome and I don't really regret my choice, but I found negatives of my daughter recently from when she was a baby and there's just something completely DIFFERENT about them. I realized about two weeks ago that what I really wanted wasn't a 5DII/III, which is the way I was heading within a year and a half or so, but a damn Chamonix. I don't just like the images better with film, but I like the *process* better. I do enough on the computer already. Photography doesn't *always* have to be one of those things.
Nikon is really screwing up with this. People like me, who *do* use both film and digital, will likely not be supporting their brand in principle. They're going to miss out on *amazing* images. While it isn't the better business decision in the short term, I think that Nikon should look past the desire to sell as many digital devices as possible and actually come out as supporters of *all* forms of photography. Yeah, it's a pipe dream in these times, but have they looked at what's coming from film and alternative process users lately? It's obviously making a resurgence in a big way.
While it doesn't surprise me, it does piss me off and, to be honest, it's quite disappointing.
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