RPC
Member
- Joined
- Sep 7, 2006
- Messages
- 1,628
- Format
- Multi Format
Neither does film. Fragments of silver darken in light, and dyes are released. Neither of those were in nature. Photography is inherently artificial, an abstraction. Look at Kodachrome sometime, reality never looked like that. It may be a compelling look, but authentic it is not: http://blog.iso50.com/26784/large-format-kodachromes/
It has been discusses here before that Kodachrome was not an accurate film. It had crossover and dye impurity problems. That is what gave it it's different look, oddly enough, liked by many. Technically, E-6 films eventually surpassed it in quality and started Kodachrome's demise. If you are going to compare digital with film in terms of authenticity, an obsolete film is a poor choice.
The highest film quality is achieved by color negatives. Of course they do not reproduce everything that is actually there, but they are very high quality to begin with and are ready for printing, scanning, etc., requiring no additional manipulation. Contrast that with a digital sensor which requires lots of algorithm processing to get to appear to be the quality of a negative. Therefore by default digital is less of a representation of reality than a negative.
To add insult to injury, a digital file is generally converted to a compressed format which cause some degree of degradation, further moving it away from what was actually there.