Sonny Boy Havidson
Established
Well... Many younger have never owned a digital camera and always shot film! Am I still a "younger" at 28?
Of course I agree. But what is it? And how is it distinguishable even by non-photographers?. . . It looks "serious" or "real". Something like that.
Of course I agree. But what is it? And how is it distinguishable even by non-photographers?
Cheers,
R.
I wish I knew what "it" is, but my guess is that our eyes just don't see things like a digital sensor sees things. If you focus on one thing, like the words on the screen you are currently reading, everything in your peripheral vision and behind the screen are out of focus. Our eye-brain connection recreates images in our head in a much more film-like way. Having everything so sharply in focus doesn't connect with us on that intimate level. Also, our memories are hardly digital-sharp, they often are fuzzy or grainy, much more like film captures light versus how a digital sensor records it. Is that "it"? I dont know, but it sounds good to me.
. . . I do have a digital camera on my phone which I'll use but it's not that good (3.2MP of freyed edges and JPEG artefacting, yum) I did have a digital camera once in 2004. It lost all my pictures when the battery compartment door broke (internal memory on the camera.)
I was not at all pleased. I used disposable cameras for the rest of the week in Tunisia and got some of my favourite photos of all time.
Great story. Interesting how IT professionals and others who have worked professionally with computers, other than as users, tend to polarize into 'Computers are God' and 'I don't trust the things further than I can throw them'. (I used to write technical promotional material for mainframes and associated software...)