Do B&W photographers have to work harder than Color Photographers?

Ultimately it is the end result, the "print" we are commenting on. In terms of traditional darkroom processing color photography has less options than in b&w processing...time/temp/chemicals, etc.. B&W darkroom work presents many more options and possibilities. That is not to say it is easier to produce a color print, rather the process has less options.

I think a well crafted print, color or b&w, will stand critical review. A bad color print is more noticable than a bad b&w print as most people are used to "seeing" in color. It takes experience and usually some training to "see" in b&w.

Good work will hold up and bad work won't as long as there is good work to set the standard.

Best regards,

Bob
 
rpsawin said:
Ultimately it is the end result, the "print" we are commenting on. In terms of traditional darkroom processing color photography has less options than in b&w processing...time/temp/chemicals, etc.. B&W darkroom work presents many more options and possibilities. That is not to say it is easier to produce a color print, rather the process has less options.

I have never noticed that. I do print both color and black and white.
 
I've recently spent a lot of time thinking about why people seem to prefer dramatic over-saturated, heavily-processed, landscape photos to the more realistic type. I just think bright flashy colors catch the eye. So, not only do B&W photographers have to produce better work to be noticed, but so do color photographers who prefer to keep things more natural looking. I think someone called it the bling factor.

Not to digress too far, but I've noticed that my most viewed shots on flickr are the ones with a woman in them, regardless of how colorful or good the shot is.

Paul
 
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