I always have an internal struggle when I get the temptation to replace color with B&W, whether it is film or digital.
What goes through your minds when you decide on using B&W, and ho did you get started on such a path by which you ignore colors and by which you favor grades of grey instead?
Is it an "art factor" or is it the B&W chemistry in developing film or is there something else that lets you see beauty in B&W that you do not find with color?
Is it maybe just a way to save money ( it was cheaper in the past)?
Thanks for your input here.
I like to work with both color and B&W.
When I started doing photography, doing color processing at home was beyond both my means and my skills. So I could either take pictures and have the photofinisher make my photos if color, or process and print the film myself if black and white. I mostly chose the latter as I enjoyed the ability to control what I made.
When I worked for a photofinisher, I could do all the color process I wanted and have complete control. I still liked doing a lot of B&W work—the abstraction from a world of color differentiation to a world of gray tones and shapes is a useful constraint on the visual language.
With the advent of film scanners, digital cameras, image processing software, and quality inkjet printers/inks/fine art papers, I can do either color or b&w with equal facility and at the same cost. And control the whole process, from capture to print. Now I choose when I want to work color, when I want to work B&W, based on my intent and the subject matter I'm photographing.
I often process the same exposure several different ways .. a full color rendering, a suppressed palette rendering, a monochrome palette rendering, etc. In the end I pick the rendering that suits my intent—both my intent at the time of shooting and my intent in post-visualization to suit a particular project. Because when you have full (and reversible) control of the process, end to end, post-visualization becomes just as significant to the end results as pre-visualization.
G
postscript:
I tend to stick to B&W when I'm shooting film. I like the look of B&W films, where I can almost always do a better job with digital capture on color work.
It's not too critical, tho; just a preference.