Monito
Member
Could not agree more. I teach both digital and analogue. I have compared digital photography to warming a frozen dinner in the micro wave, as compared to making a curry where one has ground all the spices, stirred, tasted, adjusted the seasoning and then serves it up with a flair. Now I'm hungry, damn it.
So, you concoct and spread all your emulsions. Cool. Mine the silver too?
Such analogies as microwave dinners are often concocted by those with an axe to grind; as if there were no artistry in the pre-production, production, and post-production of a digital photograph. Either they are willfully calling work of digital photographers (and I do mean skill, effort and work) worthless in order to grind their axe or they are unaware of just how much work and skill the best practitioners are able to apply.
The first motive is ugly and the second is ignorant. Neither does analogue photography any favours.