KerrKid
Member
Why don’t we just rename an old movement and pretend it’s new?
Why don’t we just rename an old movement and pretend it’s new?
Film photography survived nearly a century without it. The problem with people is that they tend to always choose inferior processes do to them being cheaper and easier.
Some of us find these compromises to be unacceptable.
And then we're left with the idea of a "movement" of just film users, not using any digital methods whatsoever. How are they going to show each other what they're doing?-- meet in person?
I never said that we couldn't or shouldn't use digital methods for the purpose of sharing our progress or results.
I see this as the death of traditional photography as the art of analog printing is lost.
Furthermore, none of these scans are likely to survive the coming turmoil.
If doomsday's coming, I won't be worrying much about scans.
Scanning has positively saved film manufacturers. Do you think those tens of thousands of people who buy rolls of Portra or Ektar or Cinestill would buy a single roll if there was no scanning? Absolutely not. Without scanning and the ability to post those images on Instagram, Facebook, or wherever, there would be no film manufactured. If they couldn't scan the motion picture film to do final processing (colour adjustment and adding special - i.e., digital - effects), no motion pictures would be shot on film, either.
Scanning is the digital saviour of film. It's naive to think anything different.
you want to keep film alive, make it easily accessible to the most people possible. How you do it will be your movement.
People create movements. Therefore, someone has to decide.
I nominate you. What did you have in mind?
I feel a new movement is necessary to propel film photography into a strong future existance in an increasingly difficult and uncertain world.
I think we need a Committee for Creation of New Photographic Movement (CCNPM) which will solicit nominations from Photrio members (analog only,) then debate and pick 3 potential candidates. 3 managers will be selected to run with those potential movements for a period of 1 year, each having their own TikTok accounts. At the end of the year whoever has the most followers on their TikTok account will go forward as the new movement that saved the fate of analog photography.
Yes, when somebody on Photrio thinks he's in a position to start a photo movement it is a waste of time...the notion of photo movements is itself absurd.
I think we need a Committee for Creation of New Photographic Movement (CCNPM) which will solicit nominations from Photrio members (analog only,) then debate and pick 3 potential candidates. 3 managers will be selected to run with those potential movements for a period of 1 year, each having their own TikTok accounts. At the end of the year whoever has the most followers on their TikTok account will go forward as the new movement that saved the fate of analog photography.
Should that be "Yes, no, maybe, or why not?"?
On second thought, the answer is probably all four. But it is an interesting question...can one discuss/create a new movement before it starts to move? Or is it a matter of reconizing a new trend and/or possibility, and then moving that trend forward?
Avoid Nostalgia: I do not think photography would be moving forward by embracing any back-looking trends as a new photographic movement.
I use older alt processes for all my work, and the use of historical processes should not carry the images.
I feel a new movement is necessary to propel film photography into a strong future existence in an increasingly difficult and uncertain world.
It is vital to use it as a way to help to preserve this unfolding history, and to give us a unified goal to help us thru it.
What a bloody marvelous idea!...How are [photographers] going to show each other what they're doing?-- meet in person? ...
What a bloody marvelous idea!
I confess I can not see the point of taking a picture on film, then taking a picture of the negative and publishing the result to digital media. If the end result is digital media then take a digital image from the start and be done with it. I'm sure there is a filter somewhere that converts a digital image to look like some god-awful DIY cell-phone picture of a negative.
Yes, it is nice to get your photographs seen by a larger audience but I don't view a scan of a print as the end product. If I wanted a digital product I would start with a digital camera and never go near film.
The film fad among the XYZs will soon go the way of all fads. Film sales will collapse overnight. I'm afraid color film is not sustainable. RIP dye transfer, Cibachrome, and Kodachrome - and soon Ektachrome, CN41, RA4...
I hope B&W silver gelatin survives until I am safely tucked in my grave. Après moi, le déluge.
What would be gained by doing so?
What a bloody marvelous idea!
I confess I can not see the point of taking a picture on film, then taking a picture of the negative and publishing the result to digital media. If the end result is digital media then take a digital image from the start and be done with it. I'm sure there is a filter somewhere that converts a digital image to look like some god-awful DIY cell-phone picture of a negative.
Yes, it is nice to get your photographs seen by a larger audience but I don't view a scan of a print as the end product. If I wanted a digital product I would start with a digital camera and never go near film.
The film fad among the XYZs will soon go the way of all fads. Film sales will collapse overnight. I'm afraid color film is not sustainable. RIP dye transfer, Cibachrome, and Kodachrome - and soon Ektachrome, CN41, RA4...
I hope B&W silver gelatin survives until I am safely tucked in my grave. Après moi, le déluge.
The reason these threads are pointless is not only that their premise is flawed but that at no point is there offered a rational, objective and coherent demonstration of why it is essential—not important, essential—that film photography remain "alive". And the reason for that is that it's impossible to do so, i.e., it's impossible to demonstrate that the demise of film would have a significant and negative impact on photography itself—from the act and fact of photographic image-making itself to it's esthetics and qualities.
The medium may be the message, but the process isn't the medium. Photography—the photographic image—is the medium, and the history of the medium shows that it keeps on being active and relevant regardless of the process and tools used.
Not to say these don't have an impact on the way photographs are made—you don't take a photo with a 8x10 view camera the same way you do on a digital point and shoot, a photojournalist working in a war zone can show the world what's going on much faster on a digital camera than on a Pentax 6x7, etc.—, but they have no impact on the way photographs are looked at and read as photographic documents. If the photograph is meaningful—to me, to my family, to my community, to people in general, to society, to other photographers, etc.—the tools used to take it—digital, film, color, black and white, point and shoot, 8x10, 6x7, panoramic—are absolutely irrelevant.
Photography didn't die when Daguerrotype was replaced by other processes, which were replaced in turn by other processes, and photography won't even blink the day film disappears, if that ever happens. I'm even willing to bet that should that happen, only Photrio members who are in it for the process (which is perfectly legitimate) would stop taking photos; those who love doing photography—for whom making photographic images is a necessity beyond the process itself—would switch to digital, or whatever new form of photography there is at that time.
Same way Bob Dylan going from acoustic to electric guitar didn't prevent him from making great music.![]()
What a bloody marvelous idea!
I confess I can not see the point of taking a picture on film, then taking a picture of the negative and publishing the result to digital media. If the end result is digital media then take a digital image from the start and be done with it. I'm sure there is a filter somewhere that converts a digital image to look like some god-awful DIY cell-phone picture of a negative.
Yes, it is nice to get your photographs seen by a larger audience but I don't view a scan of a print as the end product. If I wanted a digital product I would start with a digital camera and never go near film.
I was making reference to the fact that, currently, you can look at reasonable representations of the work of a lot of different people spread far and wide - even know that the photographs would look better as prints in your hand than on a screen - and that none of that would be possible except for this purely digital means of communication.
I don't consider a scan of a print an end product, either - but a lot of people do consider a negative scan as the end product. The point of what I was saying is that it's fine to not be satisfied with that but you (actually, George) have to accept that the vast majority of people are satisfied with fully digital (and the vast majority of film users are satisfied with negative scans).
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links. To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here. |
PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY: ![]() |