Thomaspin said:
Thanks, all, for your comments on my 'Film is Dead' piece.
So you're the one who wrote those.
🙂
Here's an opportunity to consider another aspect of the great photography debate.
Actually, I enjoy reading things like that, and I even enjoy the controversies those raise, as long as all of us keep sane and respect each other and each others' opinions.
When I first got into photography, B&W was what I could afford and I shot Tri-X almost exclusively. As a high school and then college student, color was very expensive, in particular the prints. For a while I got on this kick of shooting slides and then printing those I really wanted prints of.
There was also the almost-instant gratification factor of B&W. B&W was next-day, or even same-day if your got it in early. Color was a few days for Berkey (who often did a yucky job on printing) or a week for Genuine Kodak<tm> processing, which was very consistently good but more ex$pen$ive!
I haven't shot real B&W for years. 20 at least, I don't really remember. Today the processing is opposite. Decent (usually) results in an hour for color. Quicker if you sweet-talk them into doing a DO-CD while you wait. B&W is at the indie lab and when I last checked they did a batch every few days. Yes, that's more expensive than color at Wally World.
I keep thinking of trying Tri-X again, but then I think of what you said about Photoshopping to monochrome. I can even play around with virtual color filters. Want more cloud and darker sky, go for the red.
🙂
Oh well, these threads are interesting, but I agree we need to resist the temptation to take things too seriously.
🙂