Bill Pierce
Well-known
No question - digital has changed photography, but has it made it better? Somehow that strikes me as an overly broad question that often produces a frenzy of emotion laden conflict between normally friendly photographers. Let’s ask a more restricted version of the question. Can digital produce better prints than film? In the all wet darkroom you have contrast and brightness controls along with burning, dodging and, in the case of black-and-white, bleaching. If you shoot film, but scan it and print digitally, you add a variety of additional controls along with some “special effects” that are difficult to execute in the wet darkroom. If you start with digital, the raw file can provide more extreme adjustment opportunities along with adjustment opportunities that don’t exist if you start with film. And a 35mm film camera at any given ISO may not produce the same level of fine detail as a modern, top of the line digital with a full frame sensor.
Like most news photographers, I moved to digital. I can shoot at high ISO’s at many frames per second and still capture a broad tonal range. And I have many more tools to control the image that will be printed on my inkjet printer than I had in my wet darkroom days. But only rarely are the prints better than the ones that came out of my wet darkroom. I can make more prints more easily, and that’s nice. But that’s the change I see between film and digital. Where I see an improvement in printing with digital is the flexibility of interpretation of a digital raw file more than an increase in print quality. What I see most often is an increase in quantity, not quality. I guess it goes back to that first question - “has digital made photography better.” I think it has the potential for that. But for now, it has just made it easier to make more of it.
How’s that for a grouchy old person even if he is a big fan of digital? Your thoughts?
Like most news photographers, I moved to digital. I can shoot at high ISO’s at many frames per second and still capture a broad tonal range. And I have many more tools to control the image that will be printed on my inkjet printer than I had in my wet darkroom days. But only rarely are the prints better than the ones that came out of my wet darkroom. I can make more prints more easily, and that’s nice. But that’s the change I see between film and digital. Where I see an improvement in printing with digital is the flexibility of interpretation of a digital raw file more than an increase in print quality. What I see most often is an increase in quantity, not quality. I guess it goes back to that first question - “has digital made photography better.” I think it has the potential for that. But for now, it has just made it easier to make more of it.
How’s that for a grouchy old person even if he is a big fan of digital? Your thoughts?