Steve M.
Veteran
Someone here (Frank?) recently had a good thread going on prints vs monitors. I agreed on the thread that a monitor, being back lit, would give excellent results, but the problem is that everyone's monitor displays differently, so that could be an issue.
Recently I had an experience that showed that a print in the hand is worth two on the monitor, if you will. At a new-to-me coffee house I struck up a conversation w/ the owner over the camera I always have w/ me. I told her that I was a B&W film photographer, and while it wasn't my thing to do commercial stuff, I would be happy to do something for her at a nominal fee (especially since she offered to show my work). She mentioned that she wanted some post cards w/ a coffee cup on them. Seems that tourists would often come in, and they wanted something to send back home or to keep as a souvenir.
I told her fine, I'll do the image part and you can use someone else for the logo/photoshopping part. After several tries (low light, a 1.4 lens and Rodinal are not ideal for this type of thing), I used my old gold standard, a Nikon camera w/ a Leica R 90 Elmarit and Tri-X. All I have at home is large fiber darkroom paper, so I scanned some negs and sent them to Snapfish for some full frame 8x10's, and had them sent to the coffee house. Snapfish being Snapfish they never arrived, so I sent the owner some jpg's of the shots. She was not very enthusiastic when I saw her afterwards, and I figured, well, she doesn't like them. No accounting for taste and all that. Then I got an email from her a few days later that said the prints finally came and they were great and she loved them. Go figure. So I think having a medium size print in your hand is different than a flickering image on a monitor, at least in this type of instance. Here's 2 shots. The first is one of the few that worked w/ the Canon FD 50 1.4 and Rodinal (note the grain in the cup handle), the second one is the Leica lens and D76. Both are Tri-X, and everything was handheld in low light at 1/30. Sorry, I can't show you the prints:{
By the by, the prints from Snapfish look nothing like these scans, and the one big darkroom print I made for myself on fiber paper looks nothing like the Snapfish prints.
Recently I had an experience that showed that a print in the hand is worth two on the monitor, if you will. At a new-to-me coffee house I struck up a conversation w/ the owner over the camera I always have w/ me. I told her that I was a B&W film photographer, and while it wasn't my thing to do commercial stuff, I would be happy to do something for her at a nominal fee (especially since she offered to show my work). She mentioned that she wanted some post cards w/ a coffee cup on them. Seems that tourists would often come in, and they wanted something to send back home or to keep as a souvenir.
I told her fine, I'll do the image part and you can use someone else for the logo/photoshopping part. After several tries (low light, a 1.4 lens and Rodinal are not ideal for this type of thing), I used my old gold standard, a Nikon camera w/ a Leica R 90 Elmarit and Tri-X. All I have at home is large fiber darkroom paper, so I scanned some negs and sent them to Snapfish for some full frame 8x10's, and had them sent to the coffee house. Snapfish being Snapfish they never arrived, so I sent the owner some jpg's of the shots. She was not very enthusiastic when I saw her afterwards, and I figured, well, she doesn't like them. No accounting for taste and all that. Then I got an email from her a few days later that said the prints finally came and they were great and she loved them. Go figure. So I think having a medium size print in your hand is different than a flickering image on a monitor, at least in this type of instance. Here's 2 shots. The first is one of the few that worked w/ the Canon FD 50 1.4 and Rodinal (note the grain in the cup handle), the second one is the Leica lens and D76. Both are Tri-X, and everything was handheld in low light at 1/30. Sorry, I can't show you the prints:{
By the by, the prints from Snapfish look nothing like these scans, and the one big darkroom print I made for myself on fiber paper looks nothing like the Snapfish prints.