I'd like to jump into this lovefest with a couple of comments, but I don't want to start a war.
1) I have read Mike's blog, and find it interesting. I have no doubt that the described lens is a real cracker.
2) The film used appears to have been SPUR-Orthopan, not Gigabit. Now, I don't know that the two of them are the same. Are they? Why the talk about Gigabit?
3) I had also read that Gigabit was Agfa Copex. If so, and if Agfa is defunct, does that not make Gigabit gone as well? And if SPUR is the same as Gigabit and the same as Agfa Copex...
4) I accept and also believe that a typical 35mm frame of well-exposed, processed and (yes) scanned film is superior to most consumer-grade digital images at this time.
5) I also believe that will change in time.
6) I also believe it doesn't matter for most photographers. I can buy an Indy car to get to work, I guess. I don't need one to get to work. A cheap Kia SUV works just fine.
7) I accept that a comparison of 'print' in the case of film and 'image' in the case of digital is difficult to make, but I reject the notion that one must not or cannot or should not scan film to achieve one's aims, and I especially reject the notion that I can't compare a scanned frame of film to digital. Sure I can. And I will. And guess what? Film wins the quality test there too. I'm cool with that - it helps me in many ways when I do shoot film. But I'll scan and compare as I wish, not be bound some silly 19th century ethic about what is meet and proper to do with film.
Filmist purity means nada to me - I don't possess a darkroom, could not do color if I wanted to (color-blind), and have no desire to do optical enlargements anymore since I began scanning. One can insist that what I do is not optimal for film - so be it - it is what I do and that's good enough for me.
8) And finally...
The self-congratulation is rather obvious, as if a war or a battle had been won. I wonder what kind. Look, look, film beats digital! John Henry beat the steam drill! Whoo-hoo! OK, great. I never doubted that on quality film is much better than digital.
But I use digital to make money for the same reason that most pros have gone to digital, be they film-loving or not; it is faster for many of us. I shoot film for my own purposes and in cases where digital just can't do the job - like a recent available-light event I did. Needed pushed B&W, no digital could do it.
I do understand that there are some technophobes out there who won't/can't seem to get up to speed with PS and whatnot - for them, printing is still much faster and good on them, no problem. But they can't legitimately insist that film is faster workflow - it is just faster for them. I guarantee that I save man-hours and even days of work by doing event photography with digital, as do most pros (or part-time low-rent pros like me) who have switched over.
I'm all for comparisons, and I agree completely that film beats equivalent digital face to face. Not even a contest. But - for what I need it for, digital is a time-saver and a money-saver for most uses. Not every shot I take will end up being blown up to the size of a billboard - to date, none of them have (lol), so I don't even know what I'd want or need 400 lines of resolution for anyway. And for those who shoot photos for billboard reproduction, they shoot MF or LF anyway, don't they? Just curious what niche this film / lens combo fills.
Best Regards,
Bill Mattocks