The comment was made above that scanning is helping keeping film alive. My point was to demonstrate that it could stay alive and well even if scanning hadn't existed.
you are probably right, but we don't live in that reality at the moment. but in this day and age
the general public ( and some hardened well shown artists ) use scanners and digital techniology
in their work on a regular basis, and have for decades. its an establised medium and works well for some people,
and for others, understood it is the spawn of the devil &c.
I don't know what is so hard to believe that many of the people working with digital negatives wouldn't be if a large camera negative was a requirement. There are people on this site using digital negs for their alt work.
yup
and not just ink or pigment negatives but those worked on by a computer and projected with a digital enlarger head onto
traditional photographic film. or onto overhead transparancy film ( or paper ) spit out by a xerox machine. while i have read deep into how to do it
and have made contact to contact PAPER negatives i've never done it using restrainers &c & ortho/litho film as described on
the unblinkingeye by ed buffaloe and liam lawless and others, it IS easier and gives great results and a known quantity to use electronic means.
and these alternative techniques have opened photography up to people who would never have done it or could never have done it ( and maybe gotten them hooked )
its not too far fetched to see somebody in the years to come to use an electronic image making system ( their phone? tablet? retinal implant? ) have
a large FILM negative made and a print created using an image making technique from the 1860s which will last forever...
i'm doing similar things with tiny crappy cellphone images made into cyanotypes ... and im looking forward to the "brother from another planet" type implant.