Oh no!! I've been calling them "gelatin-silver prints"!! Did I get it backwards?
Interestingly, Google gives 266,000 hits for "gelatin silver print" and only 103,000 for "silver gelatin print." Yet most of us appear to prefer the latter.
Ok, the "photograph" versus "print" divide may be my private obsession but I remain proud to say "photograph" with a warm, friendly, clench-fisted assertiveness.
.I have no problem with the term print, as that is what I am doing - I am making a print of a negative when I reproduce my images on paper. To me, if you want to be technical, the negative in-camera is the photograph. <snip>
And just as surprisingly, the number of hits that Google returns for any set of words is basically irrelevant.
lets something straight here. The word photograph means "light drawing" it does not mean sprayed ink. A photograph is something produced by drawing with light.
An inkjet print is an inkjet print. It is not a photograph. If you call an inkjet print a photograph you are lying. You are deceiving your audience and most probably you are deceiving yourself.
I find it highly amusing that all the inkjet printing people are so ashamed of what they are producing that they have lie about it and call them giclee or archival or anything but what they are, which is inkjet prints. As long as they are that ashamed of their work and treat their customers with contempt by trying to deceive them, they will never have any crdibility. But thats their problem...
So by your logic, what are all these things we are making with cameras? A camera does not draw light onto the film, and we don't draw with light as we are shining it through a negative onto paper(unless of course you think of burning and dodging as "drawing").
And so we are all deceiving ourselves by calling our silver/platinum/gum whatever prints photographs.
I am starting to think that (with the existence of Apug as evidence) it is the "analog" photographer who is starting to be threatened by the "big scary world of digital photography". Face it, it is getting better, and you are threatened by the quality and perceived ease of making digital prints. Am I advocating everyone switch to digital because it is the latest and greatest? Hell no, I still use an 8x10 and my finger nails are still black. Just use whatever you use and stop worrying about it.
I am going to quote Shawn Dougherty here, "You can call it 'Steve' if you want to, doesn't matter to me." Which gets back to the original topic of the post. Photographer's were probably arguing about what to call their prints long before there was even a thought about a computer making images. Furthermore, I think the issue really originated with galleries trying to make distinctions between processes, which has led up to the present dilemma of what to call these inkjet prints. Here is my basic understanding. all inkjet prints are Giclee prints. Not all Giclee prints are Iris prints. And all Dye Coupler Prints are Giclee Prints, but are they not Iris Prints. And I am still trying to fgure out what a Dye-Sublimation Print is, but I am sure it is probably an injet print.
Richard
never heard of shawn dougherty but that doesn't matter. He doesn't appear to know what a giclee print is so for the benefit of all those who don't know, here is where it came from.
Percepts, WOW, I am impressed with your mad research skills. It took you, like, half an hour to write all that. That is quite amazing. Or, did you just copy and paste? It would be nice if you acknowledged your source, even if it is just wikipedia.
Giclee is the French word for spray. Or French slang for ejaculate. "Platinum giclee"? now that's hilarious.
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