I know, for me, I need to continue to work with film - I'm still at the beginning of my career this way (and currently am without a project to focus on) but I know that when I work with film I REALLY work at it - when I take a digital photograph it seems to me to be not worthwhile and that I'm not building anything either in personal skill or a lasting portfolio.
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I'm in the same position, just starting out and agree with your assessment completely.
I got started on digital. I'm young, and my first camera was a 1.3MP Point and Shoot Sony. I grew up in the digital age of photography. I got my first DSLR in 2006, when my "interest" in photography was expanding.
But it wasn't until I discovered film/analog/traditional/classical/proper/real/silver/darkroom/chemical photography that my serious interest/hobby turned into a true passion, especially with my foray into film being straight into 4x5 Large Format, which I am completely in love with.
Truth is, I had grown bored of digital. I always enjoyed making pictures with it, but I'd take a bunch of pictures and they'd just wind up sitting in my iPhoto library, occasionally getting looked at or re-photoshopped. It just seemed like a hobby with no real ends and no real reward to it.
For me, the real reward of shooting film boils down to the whole process of making photos with this medium (especially LF), and the organic, physical nature of it. Aesthetic characteristics of film aside (which I do prefer, as well), I think that my enjoyment of and involvement in this whole process shines through in the quality of my prints. And, at the end of the day, I have real, physical prints that I can hold in my hands , which I know that
I made out of nothing but light and chemistry.
Even still, I don't discredit digital photography, even though my Canon 50D has been collecting dust ever since I held my first negatives fresh from the developer.
Photography is the process of making a photograph. There are different processes, but the end result is always a photograph. If you make a photograph by capturing light information on photosensitive cells, manipulating it in Photoshop, and printing it on an inkjet, you wind up with a photograph achieved through a particular process. If you capture light information via a chemical reaction on a silver emulsion, process in chemicals, and print in the darkroom, never seeing a computer, you have also made a photograph though a particular process.
Just because digital photography isn't the process you use or the one you prefer, doesn't make it "not photography." If you do silver printing only, does that then make alternative processes "not photography" simply because you don't use/prefer them? Or is slide film "not photography" because you're generating a positive in the camera instead of a negative?
I think its very naive and elitist to say that digital isn't photography. It serves its purpose, and many people prefer it for whatever reasons they have, artistic credentials aside. I think a lot of the anti-digital sentiment stems from a rejection of the mainstream, so as to make one feel more special and unique (I'm so good and cool and artistic because I use film and all those idiots shooting digital don't know anything about photography, because I'm so much better than them).
Choose the process that works best for you, that you enjoy the most, and allows you to make the best photographs in the end.
Judge other photographer's work by the
photographs they produce, not by the process they went about making said photographs, be it a daguerreotype, a silver print, or an inkjet print from a photo they took with their iPhone.
As for a descriptor, I say that I'm a photographer. If people ask what medium I shoot in, I'm happy to elaborate and explain it to them (Unless I'm busy trying to take a picture, then I give really short, truncated answers so they'll leave me alone. Using a 4x5 in the city generates a lot of curiosity). I don't like traditional/classical terminology because it makes it feel antiquated and may imply that my photographs themselves are "traditional." If I were to use a term like that, I'd add "process" to it, just to clarify.
Some thoughts
- Traditional Process Photography
- Classical Process Photography
- Traditional, Silver-Process Photography (or whatever process you use)
- Large Format Photography (Assuming you're using LF, this might not mean anything to most people but anyone who is "in the know" will instantly know what you mean.
I think it really depends on what you're trying to get across. Are you trying to advertise yourself/your pictures? In which case, simply "photographer" works fine. You can elaborate in further conversation or in a bio page on your website. If you're talking to fellow artists, your pictures should be evidence enough that you're not shooting digital. I feel like putting anything other than "photographer/photography" after your name seems forced and seems like you're trying too hard to make yourself look different.
In conversation, it could be as simple as (depending on the degree of formality), "I'm a photographer; I work with traditional film processes." or something along those lines.