sircarl said:
On Mike Johnston's excellent photoblog yesterday, there was an interesting discussion on the relative merits of film vs. digital for B&W photography, posted by him and contributor Carl Weese. (
http://theonlinephotographer.blogspot.com/) It's nice to get reinforcement occasionally that I'm not crazy to be sticking with film!
Quote:
MIKE JOHNSTON responds: The short answer is, highlights. Digital just doesn't have enough dynamic range in the highlights. This is not so serious with color, where tonal distinction is not as important as color distinction (and because we're used to color slides, which also generally have poor highlight gradation). But in black-and-white it becomes very obvious in many cases—especially to people who are familiar with good craftsmanship in traditional optical-chemical B&W—because the richness and subtlety of the gradations in the highlights just isn't there.
Quote end
Still about a year ago this criticism ( tho based on a simple fact everybody could prove by watching the result) was either neglected, not heard or even denied each time it came up in those silly discussions titled usually "Not the medium counts, it's the pic only" .
It has been something like a Taboo in the times of digital hype to say yes, exactly because the pic counts, therefore digital B&W is NOT acceptable for me, this has been a no-no issue. Watching all this converted stuff people offered as a proof that digital B&W works fine one could make yo think that buying a digital SLR made them blind !? Fact was that this was also the time where we discovered, how many photogs had no clue at all of what a good B&W neg is ! Stunning sometimes and sometimes very very disappointing because people in which you had always trusted began to talk plain BS, as if they had not learned their craft ever.
One photog once tried to explain me that his digital camera has even MORE dynamic range than film because it offers ISO values from 50 to 3200 and I thought o.k, if this is level the discussion runs here I must give up !!
It would be plain stupidity to discuss blown out highlights with somebody who obviously has decided not to see them.
I am really glad that the digital hype now has calmed down enuff that one can publicly say that A is still A and NOT a ! Who thinks he can live with digital B&W shall do so, that is o.k. for me. But thank god it seems the times are over now when you got attacked for saying you are not contended with it and it is reason enuff for you to stay away from digital.
Thanks for pointing out this link, makes me optimistic for the future film niche in a more sober digital world !
bertram