gnuyork
Well-known
The answer is overed by a cartoon in The New Yorker:
https://condenaststore.com/featured...an-his-extensive-collection-alex-gregory.html
Hillarious! (I'm into vinyl too 😛)
The answer is overed by a cartoon in The New Yorker:
https://condenaststore.com/featured...an-his-extensive-collection-alex-gregory.html
...I really don’t care whether a print is silver or pigment. What I do care about is that printing is part the picture taking/making process that directs the viewer to what is important in the picture to the photographer...
It would be disingenuous to deny that that mentality doesn't exist among some film aficionados. It is certain true about a segment of the high end audio crowd.
Bill,
You just touched a subjet that I´ve been worried about for years...
I don't want to be controversial in any way, and I don't expect anyone to share my opinion, and even less hurt anyone's preferences...
I feel the special treatment of certain parts of the image, is something that's not related to real photography... Please everybody, don't tell me x image by y photographer has done it: I know. Even HCB's printers. I was taught to do it both in the darkroom and in the computer, but I feel it's something more related to a different art: painting... If we start changing parts of an image to direct the viewer or even worse, make them say wow, we end up like Ansel Adams, who was more a painter than a photographer (a darkroom painter with complex diagrams to surprise with a print seriously different from his negative) and I loved him when I was young, and I studied all his books before they were available in Spanish, and I love nature, but his work is horribly cold... As time goes by, I feel the more we keep photography away from painting, the healthier it is... The more we keep the scene untouched (I mean partially), the more we reach a discipline that's apart from painting... It's like being a war photographer and just chase blood and the wildest drama faces... There are better ways to do it, more delicate ones... Why shout always?
Sorry for the comment: I don't consider myself a better photographer than you in any way, and I don't think you haven't considered this before, it's just that when the objective is selling photos for the masses and moving all kinds of people, the bussiness requires procedures because others do it, but, again, only IMO, I think it's philosophically relevant to have the double honesty Winogrand talked about and use the camera for what it's good: reflecting reality, and reflecting it just as it is... "Hey, it's just a little change...", well, we shouldn't because the camera already captured what was real the way it was visible... Well, I won't insist and I won't answer other related comments because this is a little away from the thread... All I meant was, if a good direct print is not enough, there's a problem elsewhere... Maybe I'm just part of the school that says photography ends exactly when you press the shutter...
John,
For me you have done matured. The film was just a stepping stone for you, and now you have your own style, which is a great thing.
Exploring a medium and moving to a new medium results in growth. As much as I am a film fan presently, digital taught me a lot and made me a better photographer. I love both mediums, but because of the familiar I have a preference for film.
Both mediums make me happy, but basically my identity is still old-school, and perhaps I'm a retro-slob. LOL.
Cal
Maybe I'm just part of the school that says photography ends exactly when you press the shutter...
I think one of the powers of photography is its believability. That’s lessening for a number of reasons that range from the popularity of programs that apply extreme effects to phone pictures to the current trend in photo galleries for conceptual art that fills their walls with images considerably below the quality of photographers who excelled at this before it became the rage. But I certainly don’t want my more conventional, less conceptual, photography to be thought of as anything but straightforward and believable. In other words, I’m a manipulative old person who doesn’t want to get caught sneaking his opinions into supposedly objective photographs. You’re younger and more honest - or at least less manipulative in both the photographic and human senses of the word.
So, you use slide film only?
Maybe I'm just part of the school that says photography ends exactly when you press the shutter...
Showing the spocket holes on one or more sides tells you nothing about how much or little a scanned negative has been manipulated in software other than it was not cropped on the sprocket hole side. Showing or not showing the spocket holes is purely an aesthetic decision.I do this to indicate, although the image was printed digitally, it was made on film. This adds a bit of "I didn't manipulate it" to the viewer.
My negatives require development. Even more, I expose them for certain development: it's considered before pressing the shutter, then, part of the image. Of course, my prints are exactly like my negatives: well exposed and well developed, once you get blacks in the base+fog, the print is beautiful.
I could be happy with film in larger formats... meaning medium format or larger ... IF I had a project that warranted it.
I will then load up on 70mm Rollie 400 S that is sold in 100 foot double perf rolls for less than a dollar a foot. Basically 10-11 6x7's costs about $2.50 a 120 equiv.
Showing the spocket holes on one or more sides tells you nothing about how much or little a scanned negative has been manipulated in software other than it was not cropped on the sprocket hole side. Showing or not showing the spocket holes is purely an aesthetic decision.
You assume the purchaser cares whether the inkjet print is from a film negative which has been scanned or a digital file. Why should it make any difference?Well, I can produce a negative if requested. Others that fake the holes or sheet film borders might have trouble showing a negative if questioned. Comparing a negative with a finished print will tell the story. You couldn't extrapolate to that end? My digital images show no holes, making it easy for gallery people to distinguish between the two
I also have a long history of silver b+w printing and dye transfer color printing behind me. So, that helps with my history of being honest.
You assume the purchaser cares whether the inkjet print is from a film negative which has been scanned or a digital file. Why should it make any difference?
Enlighten me.I'm surprised you would ask.