I've seen so many comments on digital images to the effect of:
"that is so beautiful, so film like in the way it looks"
I have heard that as well.
Ever noticed no-one ever says "that is so beautiful, it looks so digital?"
I thought so.
:angel:
Also true.
So what is your point?
Is it that film is somehow better than digital, because it (at times) draws laudatory statements as to the nature of the image betraying from whence it came?
I'd rather have someone tell me a photograph of mine was beautiful because of the subject, or the lighting, or my composition, or the exposure, or the any number of things *other* than because it somehow signals to the viewer that it was shot on film, as if that were the point I was trying to convey with my photo.
"Oh, look another boring photo of a barn. But at least it was shot with film! It must be art. Let's admire it."
Tell me this. What famous musician was liked for the sole reason that he or she played a given brand or type of instrument, rather than for the music they played? What artist was known for their brushes and paints rather than their artwork? What architect was known for whether or not they drew their blueprints by hand rather than with a computer, instead of the beauty and function of the buildings they created?
I like film, I shoot film. I like digital, I shoot digital. For various reasons and at various times, I choose one brush over another brush. But if my work was merely liked because of the brush I chose, rather than the photograph I produced, I'd open a vein.