Ranchu
Veteran
Really nice work on the digital image. I don't know if you do this for a living but you have a talent with PS .. better than my work. i send stuff to a PS pro for anything "serious". Really very good!!
p.
I like your style, PKR.
😀
Really nice work on the digital image. I don't know if you do this for a living but you have a talent with PS .. better than my work. i send stuff to a PS pro for anything "serious". Really very good!!
p.
Here ya go... Which one is film? Which one is digital? Or are they both film? or are they both digital? Betchya can't tell. And even if you can, does it matter?
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I like your style, PKR.
😀
...web images on a monitor? How does that relate to the print?
I've never seen one of these threads that didn't sound a bit like it was coming from the pulpit, but web images on a monitor? How does that relate to the print? I have had no luck printing digital images that were converted to B&W, and even the film images I've scanned and ink jet printed are a far second to a proper enlarger print. I don't like digital B&W. Compared to film it looks pretty bad (printed). Especially when you get to medium format.
Really nice work on the digital image. I don't know if you do this for a living but you have a talent with PS .. better than my work. i send stuff to a PS pro for anything "serious". Really very good!!
p.
Well ... that's a step up from the 'plastic looking' label that seems to haunt digital! 😛
Incidentally I can take a raw file from my D700 and produce a black and white conversion that pleases me perfectly and the only thing missing will be film grain. That's no biggy for me because I actually prefer medium format for this specific reason ... the image is not (generally) being dominated by the grain.
Some people seem to treat grain as some sort of photographic badge of honour and produce high key images with grain in totally innapropriate amounts IMO.
OK, so this is a 35mm Tri X in D76
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Nicks sweet MSpaint skills.When the dynamic range of sensors improves, and it surely will, the argument's over in many ways!
Then what will we fight about? 😀
Your slightly hostile reaction is evidence that your perception of these samples is psychological and a placebo-ish effect on your part. Your devotion has affected your perception. It's okay... not judging. We all do this (though I've done this mostly with women I've dated, who looked better "at the time" and then thought "what was I thinking..." later on... as opposed to imaging technology choices...) If these prints came off your enlarger, you'd be happy with them. (I would be...) You would have gone through many dollars worth of expensive wasted paper to get there. You are looking for blown highlights and you are looking for "plastic-y skin tones" - and finding them, which is usually a function of over-aggressive noise reduction which wasn't used on these photos. If these photos were shot on film you wouldn't be looking for blown highlights and the skin tones would be smooth. You also would probably embarrass yourself if I spread out a bunch of prints - some digital, some traditional, and asked you to sort them out.
Again - not judging. We all do this when we're committed to an idea, technology, methodology that has been or is in the process of being supplanted by something new. What if I thought a lot of film prints look "muddy" and dull and grainy? I would find muddiness and dullnes and grain in all film prints. That's what I would be setting out to find in every photo that I thought was shot on film if I was trying to "make a case". I would be incapable of objectivity and instead be defending my choice of methodology or ideology - or both.