Thomas Bertilsson
Member
"Better" is such a relative word...
'Better liked' would have been more appropriate. Or 'popular'.
It is an interesting article that Rudofeus linked to, though, and not a bad social study.
"Better" is such a relative word...
By the way, I think Kodak can and should shrink the product line a bit more...do we really need or want Tri-X in 24 exposure rolls weighing them down when most of us use 36?
If this is helpful, HC-110 was cloned quite a while ago. It's latest non-Kodak incarnation is LegacyPro's L-110. The only real difference is that the L-110 doesn't have the yellow color of the Kodak product.
Actually, almost all of the LegacyPro line of chemicals are Kodak clones. Thus, I would guess that they should be around for quite a while if Kodak does indeed go into bankruptcy. Check out Freestyle's web site for details.
Don't know about RA-4, sorry.
No offense, you lost the passion and music is nothing more than something to fill in the background.
Originally Posted by Silverhead
Actually, almost all of the LegacyPro line of chemicals are Kodak clones.
It's unfortunate that people accept digi images the way they are. I guess if the image is in color and reasonably sharp its OK. When Wal^%$ or Walgre&^% is backed up with a line of people waiting to use the kiosk to make their own snapshots, they come to my place and expect to do the same.
The Smithsonian has reported that we (the people) have lost almost 20 years of documented history due to digital cameras. Over 95% of digi usere [sic] do not print the images and simply save them on the computer. With the rate of computer failure (pick any reason), and new incompatible hardware introductions, these images are lost forever. Got DOS? How about all the great programs etc. on your Windows 3.1 machine or W95 or W98 machine or Macintosh? Where is the old windows machine? No need to answer. Some folks have them, some not.
I wonder if I ever did have the passion - at least for recorded music. LPs were all there was once that's why I played them. I have some friends who are hi-fi enthusiasts and their equipment looks great. Aesthetics and functionality are stunning. I guess the sound is better, but it really doesn't move me that much.
That was what I was trying to illuminate with photography; maybe the regular person can detect the difference but the trade off in time, effort and expense to get there is not worth the emotional outcome.
A very important point.But the stuff a lot of us obsess over in our prints---the little place in the sky where the gradation doesn't look smooth, the difference between Zone X and "blown out"? People don't notice that; not the typical viewers of vernacular photography. I'm pretty cavalier about what I'll tolerate in a photo, but I'm forever catching hell from my family for holding back on photos of my son; I end up saying "But his hair is out of focus and there's no shadow detail!", and they're saying "But it's a cute picture of him!", so I post it anyway and worry that all the photographers are sitting in front of their computers saying "well, *there's* a guy who doesn't know how to take a picture!"
-NT
...a film shot optically printed has more depth and warmth than a digital photo. It feels closer to the moment, closer to reality.
Interesting point.
I've often wondered if, by the wave of a majic wand, the situation had been reversed. If the last 180 or so years had been imaged digitally, and then this new-fangled medium of film had only just burst onto the scene, would we be reacting the exact same way - but in reverse?
Ken
Interesting point.
I've often wondered if, by the wave of a majic wand, the situation had been reversed. If the last 180 or so years had been imaged digitally, and then this new-fangled medium of film had only just burst onto the scene, would we be reacting the exact same way - but in reverse?
Ken
Hpulley, you hit the nail square on the head!!!!! This is what I was trying to describe! Like tube type radios and amplifiers, film has a great warmth that just can not be acomplished digitally. An image captured digitally could possibly equal or perhaps surpass film in accuracy, color and sharpness, but it does not have the right "feel", something seems to be missing, the personal touch perhaps?
Nice work Jerry. One of the real advantages of digicams is the ability to take and hold a great number of images. But your's are not lost to a hard disk. Printed and bound, they are turned into history for anyone to look back on and enjoy.
Cruzingoose, I'm a ham operator and build a lot of my own gear. In one of the e-mail groups I belong to, there is currently a fair debate raging over solid state vs. tube audio amplifiers. The tube folks describe the sound of tube amplifiers as "warm" or "liquid" which drives the solid state folks nuts. How do you describe, in technical terms, a "warm" sound?
My wife talks about this idea of warm sound when trying to describe how a real piano differs from a digital version. She once asked me why I wanted a darkroom at home when I could have a new digi camera or scanner and do the same effects easier on a computer. I replied that she should try recording her piano playing, feed it into a pc and then edit the music to make it more accurate to the score. She never asked again but if she did I think I'll wonder out loud why sculptors don't employ CAD/CAM technology and ditch those chisels.
Digiprints are none of this. No grain, (just noise), when enlarged, turns into square blocks with jagged edges, bold, oversaturated color and artificially enhanced sharpness making the image harsh, needs complicated and expensive methods of display, print and edit, and finally, no future. Once the computer dies there gone forever, even optical media is NOT archival. Try reading the CDs you made back ten years ago.
The folks that print the images have a better chance of archiving their memories.
Indeed!
did You guys stock up with Kodak stuff?
I consider, ordering some stuff, to remind myself how that things "smells"
And, btw:
A warm sound is a Fender strat type-o-guitar cranked through tube rectified, 6v6 driven power stage, class A amp, alnico magnet, all paper speaker.
The solid state Fender amps are the joke of the century.
The cyber twin is the shame of the century.
I did..200 more rolls of Tri-X, some TMY and TMX..and I still play my '53 Tele through a 1964 Deluxe Reverb![]()
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