TJV
Well-known
I've been shooting the M8 for practice (without filters that's all the M8 is good for in colour...) in between film stuff for about a month now and I'm yet to be convinced I can "get" what I would with a good film. The reasons for this are many, not to mention my experivence in digi capture post processing. Fitstly, like many people who migrate from film to digital, I'm yet to replicate the same sense of light and shade with digi in a way that I can do with film. Images seem flat and beside a well exposed slide rather lifeless. From what I've seen in my images about 50% of this is due to the IR issue putting casts and unwanted detail into shadow areas or effecting colours negatively in general. The rest is due to the way digital capture seems to show bias to the highlights, where as film and the human eye is the opposite. Also the tonal areas in which grain is apparent is reversed. Film grain shows more readily in the highlights and digital the opposite. Also digi grain is next to nothing at 640iso and below...
Now, before this is taken to be a digi vs film post, it's not. Here's the catch. Times change and now is a good time for me to move with them! I've been thinking a lot about how to best exploit the traits of digital capture in a way that may break a few personal boundaries and open new doors in visual communication. That may sound rather silly to some, but when I look at work by people like Loretta Lux or Alex Majoli (sp?) I think "here are people who are choosing to work with these digital tools (for the most part) and are doing a good job in exploiting its pro's and con's to further the impact of their work. My biggest gripe with digital is that when people treat it as a tool exactly like they would a film camera, in many instances, the resulting images look plain bad. Some would call the look "plastic." I don't think this is the case. I just think it is different, and it is a look that I'm not used to seeing. I mostly shoot slide at 100asa and find if you were critiquing it's reproduction of reality you'd surely conclude that it's not sooooo life like and infact the contast is generally far higher than reality (eg slide has less of a tonal range.) Good examples of this were Jaap's hotly debated slide vs digi comparisons of the ski slope. Irrespective of the fact they were not taken under the exact same circumstances etc, most people concluded that while the M8 shot was closer to the real colours and scene of the time, the slide shot was, for many reasons, more engaging. (lets not reignite THAT debate here... It's not where I'm going with this!) My point is that like me, and most people who grew up on film, Jaap just illustrated in an around about way that digi capture requires a lot more of us than film did / does. It requires more vision.
I'm out of steam and forgotten where I was going with this.
Comments?
Tim
PS. This is in the M8 forum because that's what I'm using and I'm interested in other user thoughts. The potential for this camera is massive but may require a bit of lateral thinking to exploit.
Now, before this is taken to be a digi vs film post, it's not. Here's the catch. Times change and now is a good time for me to move with them! I've been thinking a lot about how to best exploit the traits of digital capture in a way that may break a few personal boundaries and open new doors in visual communication. That may sound rather silly to some, but when I look at work by people like Loretta Lux or Alex Majoli (sp?) I think "here are people who are choosing to work with these digital tools (for the most part) and are doing a good job in exploiting its pro's and con's to further the impact of their work. My biggest gripe with digital is that when people treat it as a tool exactly like they would a film camera, in many instances, the resulting images look plain bad. Some would call the look "plastic." I don't think this is the case. I just think it is different, and it is a look that I'm not used to seeing. I mostly shoot slide at 100asa and find if you were critiquing it's reproduction of reality you'd surely conclude that it's not sooooo life like and infact the contast is generally far higher than reality (eg slide has less of a tonal range.) Good examples of this were Jaap's hotly debated slide vs digi comparisons of the ski slope. Irrespective of the fact they were not taken under the exact same circumstances etc, most people concluded that while the M8 shot was closer to the real colours and scene of the time, the slide shot was, for many reasons, more engaging. (lets not reignite THAT debate here... It's not where I'm going with this!) My point is that like me, and most people who grew up on film, Jaap just illustrated in an around about way that digi capture requires a lot more of us than film did / does. It requires more vision.
I'm out of steam and forgotten where I was going with this.
Comments?
Tim
PS. This is in the M8 forum because that's what I'm using and I'm interested in other user thoughts. The potential for this camera is massive but may require a bit of lateral thinking to exploit.