What does distress me is someone saying the digital technology is to blame because they can't make an inkjet print from a digital file that has the same tonal characteristics as a silver print. Superb black-and-whte photographers, for example Salgado, can mix their early film work and recent digital work and make them match in either exhibits or books. When I have time, I'll try to outline all the ways you work on that. But the easiest way to start is just to put some b&w silver prints on the desk next to your computer, look at some digital images on your computer screen and say what do I do to those raw files to make them look more like the prints on my desk.
Bill,
Because I cut my teeth on film the look of a silver wet print has become embedded into my work.
Salgado's work in Genesis surely displays how seamless digital and analog can be, but a trained eye can tell the differences between an analog image capture and a digital image capture by Salgado by looking at and comparing the shadows and the highlights in the exhibition that was at ICP. The digital image capture has enhanced shadow detail, and the analog image capture has a smoother roll off in the highlights.
So it came down to better shadow detail, or smoother highlights, but the differences were so minute that only a very careful trained eye can recognize the difference.
Today I use Piezography, and it is amazing that much of the technology has trickled down to where a guy at my level can do some of the things Salgado did, but without the best lab in Paris.
At PhotoPlusExpo two years ago I made a 13x19 print on 17x22 paper to gift Robert Rodriguez, the Artist In Residence for Canson Paper. When I went to the Leica booth I went there with my SL2-MOT and made fun of the guys there saying, "Why would I want a new SL when I have an old one?"
I met Richard Herzog who was one of the guys manning the SL booth and he inquired about my work, so I went back to the Canson booth to borrow back the print I gave Richard Rodriguez.
The image was a panoramic view of the old Domino Sugar Refinery on the East River taken with a Leica Monochrom and 28 Cron at F5.6 shot from a vantage point from above on the Willimsburg Bridge.
Anyways I blew the guys in the Leica booth away. First off they thought it was film, and not only film but possibly large format. For me a larger 20x30 print really opens things up and is a totally different experience than holding a 13x19 print in your hands.
It so happens that Richard Herzog was a marketing director for Phase One and an avid large format shooter. Richard was very keen and wanted to know more about Piezography for his own work.
So one reason to shoot mucho film is to learn the look. After that transfering it to digital is not too difficult. I tend not to be heavy handed with post processing, my digital skills are low and really basic, but I have that trained eye. BTW I tend to shoot like a large format guy because I try to optimize everything at image capture to minimize post processing.
Cal