Mainecoonmaniac
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- Dec 10, 2009
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You've eaten a fine cooked meal and can't stand microwave dinners.
Digital images are like nitrate film -- they will go up in smoke or be reduced to dust very soon, maybe before this century is up. Traditional silver b&w prints and negatives will last 200 years. And 200 years from now many people will be interested to see what those olde time savages (you and me) were up to.
The preference for analog is a mixture of several things in various proportions depending on the person:
... -An image on film has some sort of inherent "integrity" ...
The preference for analog is a mixture of several things in various proportions depending on the person:
-It's what we know how to do
-We enjoy the "magic" of photo-chemical processes
-We enjoy the tactile experience of darkroom work
-We work with computers in our day jobs and prefer not to use them for hobbies
-We want to make everything ourselves from A-Z (wet plate etc etc.)
-Nostalgia
There are some other purported reasons people cite, but I don't think they hold much water at this point, and they have little to do with art:
-Analog is higher quality
-An image on film has some sort of inherent "integrity"
-You have to be better with film because you can't shoot as much volume (see "machine-gun")
Hi. I am trying to understand myself better on a sleepless night. I have two wonderful Nikons, among others, a D700 and a F5. Also. a Rolliecord V. In this day and age of digital I ampulled to keep my bulk loaders full of FP4 and HP5.
I don't understand my reluctance to embrace digital. Has anyone had a similar experience
L
Hi. I am trying to understand myself better on a sleepless night. I have two wonderful Nikons, among others, a D700 and a F5. Also. a Rolliecord V. In this day and age of digital I ampulled to keep my bulk loaders full of FP4 and HP5.
I don't understand my reluctance to embrace digital. Has anyone had a similar experience
L
When it comes to objectively favourable or superior qualities of analog over digital, no I'm afraid I cannot cite anything. I wish I could, but at this point digital technology has come far enough that I don't think you can really say it is inferior to analog, other than perhaps regarding certain "archival" issues (which I'm not sure I understand).
Correct, grain vs noise is subjective. One could easily argue digital quality is better because at a given print size/magnification the better digital cameras currently exhibit virtually no noise/grain up to much higher ISO "speeds" than film. You can argue this either way.
Latitude: That ship has sailed too. Technically you are of course correct for a single exposure, but you can pretty easily combine several digital exposures and get virtually unlimited net latitude. Of course people often overdo this and it looks ridiculous, but that's not the fault of the technology.
Don't misunderstand me, I'm not a digital shooter. Never will be. 100% darkroom all the way. I'm just playing devil's advocate so that we can be honest with ourselves when it comes to why we use film. I think the objective arguments we had have evaporated as digital has evolved from its infancy. We're left with our subjective preferences with respect to the process itself. It isn't about art.
I did not take the plunge into digital until Sigma came out with their SD14 Foveon imager based SLR. My reasoning was based on my prior film experience, film records the whole spectra at every point. A Bayer masked imager, along with the necessary Anti-Aliasing "soft focus" filter, and high software dependance for color interpolation just is not what I feel acceptable to achieve maximal image quality. Just as with film, Foveon imager chips employ a layered geometry to detect Red, Green, and Blue at every photosite. My decision to buy the SD-14 was made after reading the patents Foveon reveived on their technology. Even with my SD14, I still prefer film as the more recent cameras from Sigma still fall short of what can easily be achieved with film. Besides, I picked up a Sigma SA-9 35mm SLR with a pair of lenses for $35, Even my Mamiya RB67 ProSD was under $300, while Sigma's SD1 Merrill Digital SLR Camera lists over $1,800 on B&H.
I doubt I could just do it as a mere hobby at this point, I would lose all the freedom I have and it would not be nearly the fun it is now...
Surely as a hobby you have more freedom?
Why ℗ Analogue Film in a digital Age?
Digital images are like nitrate film -- they will go up in smoke or be reduced to dust very soon, maybe before this century is up. Traditional silver b&w prints and negatives will last 200 years. And 200 years from now many people will be interested to see what those olde time savages (you and me) were up to.
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