teddy
Jose Morales
Film is REAL photography. I don't mean to be philosophical.
Two of the folks who helped me when I first started out were Gene Smith and David Vestal. As different as their personal styles were, they both felt that interpretive printing was part of the process. And it is. All of us worked as hard on our printing as on other facets of our photography. Today, much of my printing is inkjet as was David’s at the end of his life. Had Gene lived long enough, I’m sure he would have beaten all of us in the digital darkroom.
Once a picture is framed and behind glass, it is difficult to examine the paper surface and tell whether the print is silver or inkjet. I routinely ask folks to tell me whether my framed prints are silver or inkjet. They can be either, but so far, folks haven’t been able to tell which. That’s not because I’m a good inkjet printer. It’s because I’m an inkjet printer who grew up with silver and knows what a silver print looks like. You can make digital look like almost anything you want, if you know what you want. (But, your probably going to have to throw a little of the shadow detail away if you want a digital print to look like a silver print - and that’s understandably hard for most folks.)
There is no logical reason why it should be impossible to go slow, to enjoy the process, to produce "ratty looks" with a digital camera also...
As you can see from the number of posts, I was an active form member for many years -- over the last few yesrs not s' much. This is because it was at this point that I switched over to digital. In the early to mid-2000's digital was an emerging tech and it was also relatively expensive. Simply, imo, the quality of digital did not yet match that of 35mm film. No way. Film cameras and lenses were available cheap on the used market and film was still able to be purchased and developed locally at many, many locations.
However, digital tech has matured since I'd say about the 2010's. It is comparable to film -- better, actually, in low light. Prices have dropped. My primary shooters are a Nikon 5300 that has a great 24 MP sensor without an AA filter. $389 shipped refurbed. And my "rangefinder" is an Olympus ZX-2 -- used $150. I print at home from an Epson inkjet. The quality of both these cameras exceeds (Nikon) or comes close to (Olympus) any of the 35mm cameras I've ever used. Meanwhile, the places I can purchase and have color film developed have dried up nearly completely.
Since effectively "going digital" I don't feel as though it's "proper" to post (sometimes troll) here these days. I was a film die hard. But there comes a point....
Digital is, in every measureable, testable way, technically superior to film...
Nope.
Such statements are the begin of discussions nobody needs anymore.
I´d say digital is more popular and faster.