roscoetuff
Well-known
I have a Sony A7RII... one of the best digitals, and yet since returning to film, I'm using it mostly for DSLR scanning. Can I do a lot more with a Sony? If high speed shooting is your standard and it seems to be from the OP's note, maybe it works. But if the client only wants one image... all you do is trade one problem for another in post processing and editing.
Similar reasons to Barry Thornton's decision for monochrome outlined in "Edge of Darkness": Because it involves and demands more of the photographer and viewer. Film is like watercolor, and unlike digital, you can effectively change the sensor by changing the film or developer without having to buy a new camera. Digital does do well in low light without demanding a time exposure. I'd wager though that film requires the photographer to become more aware of the light, while digital allows the photographer to ignore it, amplify it, bend it, change it. Which one is more of an artist's tool for the creative and which is more of a tool for the factory production line? Different tools offer different solutions and one will suit where the other doesn't.
Listen to an interview with Brian Greenberg of Richard's Photo Lab, and you'll hear how the spray and pray digital process is killing a lot of photographers while film still has a niche for the photographer where the budget forces curtail of that milieu. He does a lot of digital... it's just that shooting fast and delivering 900 shots to your client or spending 60 hours in post for a 3 to 10 hour shoot isn't going to make you successful.
I'm not in that racket but pursue this for fun as a hobby. Digital's overly smooth images have their place, but suffer the same problem of overly refined grain where the resolution can actually fail to look less realistic to the eye than a less resolved image. Thornton details this rather nicely. In fact, I'd say that the smoothness of the image can smother the life of the image the way icing smothers the top of a cake.
Digital post processing of a film image? Yeah. I like that. I print with an Epson SC P800.
Similar reasons to Barry Thornton's decision for monochrome outlined in "Edge of Darkness": Because it involves and demands more of the photographer and viewer. Film is like watercolor, and unlike digital, you can effectively change the sensor by changing the film or developer without having to buy a new camera. Digital does do well in low light without demanding a time exposure. I'd wager though that film requires the photographer to become more aware of the light, while digital allows the photographer to ignore it, amplify it, bend it, change it. Which one is more of an artist's tool for the creative and which is more of a tool for the factory production line? Different tools offer different solutions and one will suit where the other doesn't.
Listen to an interview with Brian Greenberg of Richard's Photo Lab, and you'll hear how the spray and pray digital process is killing a lot of photographers while film still has a niche for the photographer where the budget forces curtail of that milieu. He does a lot of digital... it's just that shooting fast and delivering 900 shots to your client or spending 60 hours in post for a 3 to 10 hour shoot isn't going to make you successful.
I'm not in that racket but pursue this for fun as a hobby. Digital's overly smooth images have their place, but suffer the same problem of overly refined grain where the resolution can actually fail to look less realistic to the eye than a less resolved image. Thornton details this rather nicely. In fact, I'd say that the smoothness of the image can smother the life of the image the way icing smothers the top of a cake.
Digital post processing of a film image? Yeah. I like that. I print with an Epson SC P800.