... OK, having screwed up my confidence and now attired in asbestos clothing, here are some thoughts.
The APUG forums are a lie. "Analog" photography techniques are discussed here
digitally both in text and image. We use digital devices and representations to educate, elucidate, illustrate, compare and contrast, and in many cases, self-promote business enterprises. Is it any wonder that users confuse
image making with
print making?
I suspect that most users of the
Large Format Photography Forum, while invested in what may be the most traditional of analog tools, simply scan their film for presentation and digital printing. Very confusing, especially in
Image Sharing threads, where images are exhibited by either film or (less-likely) print scans.
I have made it a personal choice that
all exhibit images, of course presented digitally on my own site, be at least scanned from finished prints. It is by necessity that my photographs are viewed mainly (i.e.,
globally) in this oxymoronically "imperfect" digital form. But these light-transmitted, on-line representations don't really look like the finished, light-reflective prints. In fact, it so unnerves me that buyers consider a purchase without ever having seen the actual (unique) print that I require personal contact rather than sticking "
Buy" buttons underneath them.
The acceptance of photography as a legitimate art form has, at its core, always been bedeviled by the repeatability of its image making. That is one reason why photographers are not necessarily considered to be artists, simply by virtue of exposing light sensitive material.
My POV is that print making is a necessary part of the photography artistic process. While there have and are many great photographers, I wouldn't consider any to be artists unless they've made there own prints. The print quality, good or bad, is an entirely different matter altogether sometimes subjective, but certainly also by any objective criteria. But then, this site is not the
Artistic
Photography
Users
Group.
A darkroom lab is a commitment to the
art of photography. Though many photography enthusiasts cannot devote space, time, or monetary resources to to traditional printing, it really defines the enterprise of unique, hand made artistic endeavor.
Size may be relevant as well. While grain-less, tonally beautiful artistic jewels can be accomplished in normal print sizes, I find enlarged "less than technically perfect" mural photographs, to stand on their own, sometimes bridging the gap between painting and photography, both in difficulty of execution and dimension.
Frankly, I don't know why commercial analog printers don't sign their names underneath the photographer's on the finished print except that might not get them as much work

.