Vaughn
Subscriber
What does love have to do with it? (unless you sleep with your long lenses...)
What does love have to do with it? (unless you sleep with your long lenses...)
I agree with you. I love the experience of using a precision film camera (Rolleiflex, Hasselblad, Leica IIIC, Voigtander Vito, etc.), measuring exposure, and controlling the image capture myself. I use digital when I want a quicky capture of some scene, a grab and go. Sometimes, I do not even download the digital file from the SD card. I am not making a living from photography, and my situation does not reflect on professional practice. I'm glad (and not surprised) to see the revival in film use, and everyone I encounter when I am using a film camera is very supportive and curious. They invariably are fascinated to look through the finder of my Rolleiflex or Hasselblad..
I also find more joy shooting with late 1950's/early 1960's vintage mechanical film cameras, I know that's simply a personal thing.
I agree with you. I love the experience of using a precision film camera (Rolleiflex, Hasselblad, Leica IIIC, Voigtander Vito, etc.), measuring exposure, and controlling the image capture myself. I use digital when I want a quicky capture of some scene, a grab and go. Sometimes, I do not even download the digital file from the SD card. I am not making a living from photography, and my situation does not reflect on professional practice. I'm glad (and not surprised) to see the revival in film use, and everyone I encounter when I am using a film camera is very supportive and curious. They invariably are fascinated to look through the finder of my Rolleiflex or Hasselblad.
?????? I am glad we are all not still using horse and cart to get around, after all steam will never replace that !, and the television will never replace the cinema !!!
Move with the times.
NO really, I am a pro photographer, UK and Welsh NUJ photojournalist, press card etc, the best thing that happened to photography was digital, though I have taken up film again re buying my old Nikon F and Nikkormats and f1.4 l3nses, great hobby, but no way would I ever go back to film,
The good old days................. never were in all manner of things.
Congrats. That's good for you.Some very interesting comments, thank you everyone. Today I ordered a Canon 800D camera and sadly started packing my film equipment away. Dawning of a new era.
Keeping in mind I'm speaking from a perspective of one who is not relying on photography as way of making a living, I'd probably say .. a different level, assuming "new" implies some sort of superiority. No question detail that can be twisted beyond recognition (or whichever way to one's satisfaction) is with digital, yet I find digital too sterile in its entire process. I do it for convenience and often practicality, but reassigning some time to film has been a godsend for me.Digital has a steep learning curve, but once you've familiar with Photoshop, you can take your photography to a new level.
About five laptops ago, my computer came with a full set of disks for picture and video editing to graphic design and the operating system. One of them was Photoshop, which I still use for editing film images. I read an article late last year that claimed Adobe had said using older software was a breach of contract and illegal! For digital photography I've always used the discs that came with the camera, downloads of the latest iteration, or other freeware like Rawtherapee. I've also seen great editing in Snapseed, another free software. Digital photography is a mixed blessing, on one hand it's virtually free - if you use existing cameras - but storage on and offline is subject to whatever leverage a business wishes to apply, and prone to the standardisation shifts of any infant technology.Now you can't even buy Photoshop software, you have to rent it and it is stored off site in some sort of cloud.
. I read an article late last year that claimed Adobe had said using older software was a breach of contract and illegal! .
Citation needed?
[There IS a 'freely downloadable' copy of one of the older versions of Photoshop where the validation system was disabled due to technical reasons. Nothing stops you from downloading and using it, ...................
Could you supply a link to this download please
You have never been able to buy and own the Photoshop software. At most, you were able to buy a license to use the software, subject to certain conditions. Adobe used to provide free support for that software for a limited period of time after you purchased the license.Now you can't even buy Photoshop software, you have to rent it and it is stored off site in some sort of cloud.
You have never been able to buy and own the Photoshop software. At most, you were able to buy a license to use the software, subject to certain conditions. Adobe used to provide free support for that software for a limited period of time after you purchased the license.
The only change is that now Adobe won't support the software license you have unless you pay them regularly.
The support matters for a whole bunch of reasons, not least of which is that, for many people, their underlying operating system is being frequently updated, and the Adobe software needs to take into account those changes.
The last time I checked one still does not need a license to use XTOL nor pyro developers. No annual fees either.
Isn't CC NOT stored on your computer? Which is what that pst was poking at. I am on last hard installation version of Lightroom, unlikely to upgrade, and still get annoyed by occasional denial for using it when somehow, upon opening it with no internet connection it well ... asks for verification. And yes, it is fully purchased legal copy that's been verified, and re-verified over and over with Adobe's server..You have never been able to buy and own the Photoshop software. At most, you were able to buy a license to use the software, subject to certain conditions. Adobe used to provide free support for that software for a limited period of time after you purchased the license.
The only change is that now Adobe won't support the software license you have unless you pay them regularly.
The support matters for a whole bunch of reasons, not least of which is that, for many people, their underlying operating system is being frequently updated, and the Adobe software needs to take into account those changes.
My experience is this: Things never get better as time marches on. They only get worst. I find the participators in the digital world have us over a barrel. An example: I bought an Apple desktop back in the Nineties along with Photoshop . Of course Apple stopped supporting the desktop a few years later and after trying to upgrade the desktop and the resulting crash of this unit, I was forced to purchase a new one and forced to purchase new Photoshop software. Again after a few years Apple stopped supporting this second desktop and I was faced with the same circumstances. It is like a recurring nightmare. Now you can't even buy Photoshop software, you have to rent it and it is stored off site in some sort of cloud.
Thank God I did not get rid of my film equipment. I have a Leica collection (M3 M4 M5), a Rolleiflex 3.5F, Bronica ETR and Linhoff Karden 4X5. Although these cameras were manufactured as far back as the 1950's I can pickup which ever one I want to use and I don't have to pay some digital entity to upgrade it or find out it no longer works. The same goes for making prints.You can't beat a Darkroom and the silver gelatin prints that are produced.. It takes knowledge of Physics and Chemistry as well as creativity. Today one needs only to be a button pusher ( not my cup of tea) to photograph and produce images. As a result the quantity of images has greatly increased today and if you apply general economic theory to this production it has only cheapened the photograph.
That's my view
David Reynolds
The button pushing to me is more about automatics in digital photography, shots taken at thousand-a-minute rate with not much thought given. Sure, not all digital shooters do that, and both, film and digital,up require skill to end with a fine image. Yet, traditional process has requirements that, if not done correctly it ends up in a bin with no way to get it back in any form, outside of trying to re-shoot, which for many subjects is no longer possible, Digital has vastly changed that and certainly diluted a need for the know how to get anything of potential value.while i can sympathize with you, did you really think that aapple was going to keep supporting a computer whose infrastructure was 20 or 30 years old ? radio shack doesn't still support the TRS80 either ...
laptops and computers that can take the most recent apple OS don't cost thousands, there is a shoppe down the road from me that is selling spiffy re-vamped upgraded laptops for between 250-500$ ... and getting a subscription to photoshopcc isn't necessary. they still sell photoshop LE why not get that ? its only like 50bucks, or get affinity also -- 50bucks.
your commentary about only needing to be a button pusher is kind of funny cause most film users have been button pushers since about 1886 ! and most people who use film have no knowledge of physics or chemistry ... creativity, who knows... nothing is really much different, other than one might desire to upgrade their
equipment from time to time and get a sensor that records more information for their facebook uploads. not much different than trading in the hawkeye brownie for
the leica m3 or a linhof to make nicer 4x6 / 4x5 prints.
You didn't buy the software, you bought a license to use the software, and it came with terms.Isn't CC NOT stored on your computer? Which is what that pst was poking at. I am on last hard installation version of Lightroom, unlikely to upgrade, and still get annoyed by occasional denial for using it when somehow, upon opening it with no internet connection it well ... asks for verification. And yes, it is fully purchased legal copy that's been verified, and re-verified over and over with Adobe's server..
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