J. Borger said:
Yes i know ..... so does the difference between a digital captured image vs. image captured on film show in those prints? Same with inkjet (With QRIP on an Epson 2200 on Hahnemuhle Photorag for instance) does the capturing device really make a difference here?
Or is it the traditional wet darkroom B&W print that makes the real difference???
I never considered going back to film an alternative unless starting wet printng myself ... that's why i ask.
Or the other way round .....does it make sense to move to film or stick with film if you prints are digital anyway?
weather the digital or film signature is visible is due to some factors :
1. the quality of the scan. Flatbeds hide grain. Some do funny things to tone curves to protect shadows and highlights - this creates some artifacts occasionally. Especially when you're trying to get that information back into alignment with reality.
2. The quality of the film/ development. Are you making hte most of the media? Or have you or the lab been clumsy? I've gotten some negs back from labs that looked awful - and remain awful throughout the printing process.
3. Are you scanning the neg with a high DMAX/high color depth scanner? That makes a big difference. Between my Epson 3170 and the Konica Minolta Dimage Scan Multi Pro, the difference is 1000%. So is the price. . . .literally. and a half.
4. Are you printing on a printer that can create similar resolution to a traditional print? Perfect blacks and perfect whites . . .as perfect as paper gets . . .?
If you take a digital file and compare it to a film scan or scan of print with equal resolution, you'll notice better, more accurate, deeper, wider color range coming from the film. So long as you shot the proper film in the proper lighting and at the proper ratings - and then developed it properly.
A very well done traditional print is going to beat anything digital unless you're spending $$$$$ on digital backs and supremely nice printers and photoshop to fix all the color weakness and highlight trouble in the files.
The real issue is cost. If you're a 35mm person, chances are you can find a digital solution that will provide you with good material and save you lots of film and processing costs. But then you ahve to consider the disposability issue of digital cameras - new one every year or two. Not because they are upgraded, but because they break. If you're looking at medium format, it's a no brainer - film, wet or scanned, is better than digital if you're working with grain res files.
I've seen 11x14 prints shot in 12MP - at a local wedding photographer's studio - and I knew they were digital immediately. I can just "See" it. They look plasticy, and on close inspection, the imaging artifacts are obvious. You just have to know what you're looking at. I have a giant traditional print from 6x7 (a wedding shot of my parents) that is just immeasurably better. But, now most consumers can't tell the difference. And most of that breed of pro are manipulating hte images to mask the digitalness of them.
If I were a pro, and I didn't care about my work personally, I'd shoot digital no problem. But because I shoot for myself, forget it.