CharlesDAMorgan
Veteran
That's superb Ted!
That's superb Ted!
4bfbd93d82f9c7e8c3f5e2b8f0667b9a by , on Flickr .... Jim Marshall M4"A pro friend used to shoot concerts with film and got similar results. It can be done."
It has been done! There was a lot of great photography under difficult conditions before the advent of digital photography circa mid 1980s....
"A pro friend used to shoot concerts with film and got similar results. It can be done."
It has been done! There was a lot of great photography under difficult conditions before the advent of digital photography circa mid 1980s....
For me, that's the whole appeal of film: that making the great shot is more difficult, challenging, and requires skill. With today's digital cameras you can just up the ISO to 12800 or higher and take low light shots with ease. Sorry, I dont see the point. You're just a button pusher at this point then.
I get what you mean, but the choices of composition and content are still there... what to shoot and in which way. Unless you think how you frame an image doesn't matter... to me, how you choose to frame an image is the essence of photography, not how slow of a shutter speed you can handhold. If only holding a slow shutter speed handheld makes a photo good, then one might as well be shooting guns.
CharlesDAMorgan "A pro friend used to shoot concerts with film and got similar results. It can be done."
It has been done! There was a lot of great photography under difficult conditions before the advent of digital photography circa mid 1980s....
I guess Jim Marshall never got the memo that it wasn't possible....
And as we have seen above, it can be done and done well with film.
The point about digital being The Choice for low light is fair. While it CAN be done well with film, the cost of the ones that are not keepers are high for non-pros.
Pros these days wouldn't even think about shooting a low light concert with film, unless they were going for some kind of niche angle.
Adams shot landscapes in B&W with an 8x10 view camera because those were the limitations of his day. You can bet if he were born more recently, he'd have shot digital, maybe medium format digital.
The point about digital being The Choice for low light is fair. While it CAN be done well with film, the cost of the ones that are not keepers are high for non-pros.
Adams shot landscapes in B&W with an 8x10 view camera because those were the limitations of his day. You can bet if he were born more recently, he'd have shot digital, maybe medium format digital.
Well he was an accomplished pianist.
Yes, that's why I mentioned it. 🙂
... What if Adams was born in 2007?