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Archive 2016 · Could you go back to film?

  
 
MAubrey
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p.11 #1 · Could you go back to film?


robgo2 wrote:
You may get huge files from scans of film, but a large proportion of those MPs are just grain/noise, not detail.

Rob


You must not have read my own post close enough. I was only talking about detail--you couldn't produce noise/grain on Harman DPP even if you wanted to.



Dec 25, 2016 at 03:23 PM
George Orwell
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p.11 #2 · Could you go back to film?


jj_glos wrote:
Are we reading the same thread? I haven't seen this contempt that you keep going on about. Who are you? Your account was made it would seem just to post to this thread, which makes me wonder if it's a regular poster just trolling...


My account was made to use the buy and sell forum after the holidays and I stumbled into this thread. Sorry to disappoint you and others.

What's interesting is that nothing I have posted at all is even remotely trolling. Are those on the digital side that insecure that attacking someone who partakes in a well established thread gets called a troll?






Dec 25, 2016 at 04:05 PM
George Orwell
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p.11 #3 · Could you go back to film?


jay w wrote:
I shot a couple rolls threw the Hasselblad this summer. I was surprised how slow (tripod work) the shooting was. I loved shooting that camera and the 4x5, but I have a hard time finding time for keeping my chops in the darkroom. Processing film is one thing, but making prints is really time consuming and takes practice. It's something I enjoy (well, enjoyed), but I don't do it because of the time.

I'm still hanging onto the darkroom hoping that retirement opens some doors.

Jay


Exactly. Printing is hard. That's the point for me, to do it not because it is easy, but because it is hard.




Dec 25, 2016 at 04:11 PM
gdanmitchell
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p.11 #4 · Could you go back to film?


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Edited on Jan 03, 2017 at 11:41 AM · View previous versions



Dec 25, 2016 at 05:18 PM
jj_glos
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p.11 #5 · Could you go back to film?


George Orwell wrote:
My account was made to use the buy and sell forum after the holidays and I stumbled into this thread. Sorry to disappoint you and others.

What's interesting is that nothing I have posted at all is even remotely trolling. Are those on the digital side that insecure that attacking someone who partakes in a well established thread gets called a troll?



I actually posted in favour of film...

You again fail to address the question of where this contempt is coming from. Plenty of people don't want to go back to it for very valid reasons and only see it as something they just had to use in the past and digital had made what they personally do much easier. That's not contempt. I may have missed a post where someone was more abrupt, but I must've also missed you quoting them on that?

This was just your standard digital/film thread, plenty of discussion from both viewpoints. You changed the tone of that, and I could not see why you chose to. Which led me to the troll comment.



Dec 25, 2016 at 05:37 PM
Steve Spencer
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p.11 #6 · Could you go back to film?


gdanmitchell wrote:
Clearly 8 x 10 LF will have very small grain.

Getting back to the "could you go back to film?" question, it seems that it could almost be more of a "could you go back to LF" question in that regard. 8 x 10 LF has its place, but it is a pretty darned small one these days. I'm glad someone still does it (again including a couple folks I know personally) but it is a pretty unusual thing and, in a whole lot of ways, probably not easy to compare directly to digital in any format. For example, one person
...Show more

Dan it isn't always a question of going back to Large format film, it can be going to large format film for the first time. For example, I have recently met a guy who is developing an active studio with 12 young photographers. He shoots a lot ovf video mostly for music video. He isn't even 30 yet, but has developed a quite successful business, and he does 80 percent of his stills shooting with Large format film. His prints are stunning and he didn't return to Large format film, it was as he describes it a natural extension of the highly controlled way he likes to shoot. In his studio, he has a large darkroom where he processes all his own film, and he does that despite being a photoshop whiz. He worked in his early twenties in digital design as a profession for a few years while he was developing his photography skills. You talk about Large format film as if it is old foagies who have held onto or returned to this way of shooting and they are a very small niche. This photographer is a very different example of a young guy with tons of experience in digital media and with skills in many areas, who has developed a successful eclectic business, but also incorporated Larger format film into this enterprise as something that sets his work apart and in seeing his prints I think it suits his style beautifully and I can see why it is successful for him. To me this is an example of how film can fit in a vibrant modern approach to photography.

In my own shooting, I may turn (not return because I have never used it before) Large format film because I like a slow methodical controlled style of shooting and I think it would be fun to see how Large format film would work for my photography. I doubt I would shoot more than 50 frames a year (probably not even 20), but I would want all of them to be keepers and I would have some hope that three or four of them might be among my best 10 or so for that year. I don't know if that will actually happen, but right now that is how I am thinking about incorporating Large format film into my work and it isn't a hold on to an old approach or returning to an old approach. For me it is about a new approach that I think is worth exploring.



Dec 25, 2016 at 06:48 PM
gdanmitchell
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p.11 #7 · Could you go back to film?


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Edited on Jan 03, 2017 at 11:41 AM · View previous versions



Dec 25, 2016 at 07:04 PM
chez
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p.11 #8 · Could you go back to film?


Sure, nothing stops you with digital from being slow and methodical with your approach...but I've seen too many posts of people coming back with 1,000 images from a days outing to suggest something otherwise than slow and methodical.

Take a 4x5 or 8x10 camera out and you have NO choice but to be slow and methodical. Humans by nature are lazy and will take the easy route if given a choice. How many photogs ( % wise ) do you think would come away with maybe 10 images from a landscape outing using digital. I'd venture to say it would be close to a big fat zero. Too easy...no cost to just fire away multiple images and see which ones are best back at the computer.

I've spent plenty of time in the Rockies and seen many photogs shooting away bracketing up to 7 shots just to ensure one of them is properly exposed. Why not...it costs zero dollars to do so.

Easy to say you don't need to use an totally manual analog camera to slow down and focus on your vision...hard in practice when using digital.



Dec 25, 2016 at 07:13 PM
Ben Horne
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p.11 #9 · Could you go back to film?


The moment you look at a large format transparency on a light box with a loupe, there is no going back to digital. That was my experience anyway.


Dec 25, 2016 at 07:20 PM
PhotoMaximum
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p.11 #10 · Could you go back to film?


One more pebble to toss on this pile:

Over the years I have really enjoyed visiting galleries and viewing black and white prints shot by great photographers. There is something so "this is part of the music" when being face to face with a Adams, Smith, Maplethorp, Weston, ETC, print...



Dec 25, 2016 at 07:46 PM
George Orwell
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p.11 #11 · Could you go back to film?


jj_glos wrote:
I actually posted in favour of film...

You again fail to address the question of where this contempt is coming from. Plenty of people don't want to go back to it for very valid reasons and only see it as something they just had to use in the past and digital had made what they personally do much easier. That's not contempt. I may have missed a post where someone was more abrupt, but I must've also missed you quoting them on that?

This was just your standard digital/film thread, plenty of discussion from both viewpoints. You changed the tone of that,
...Show more

I chanaged the tone? I am not the first person who made this observation. I posted my comment after another wrote this: "I can't understand the smaller set's contempt for those who do use film."

And I guess you missed these gems:

"35mm film looks ludicrous"

"I shoot film all the time in my horse & buggy. "

"I think it's an absolute waste of time...."

"It [shooting film] seems little more than an exercise in pretentious rusticism to fight our way backwards against clear improvements brought by technological evolution.

"Film? Ho ho ho ho ho ha ha ha hahahaha. Not a chance."

"I see more than a few people cashing in on pretentiousness by marketing weddings shot on film"

If you can't see contempt in lines like the above then perhaps you can strip away some of your bias and try again.

I dont see why one can't enjoy their own tools without tossing in politically loaded comments like the above.





Dec 25, 2016 at 08:17 PM
George Orwell
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p.11 #12 · Could you go back to film?


Another sign that film is doing well today: Film Ferrania is closer than ever to launching their new E6 film.

http://www.filmferrania.it/news/2016/firsts

Proud to be a substantial backer to this effort and have my name on their founder's wall.




Dec 25, 2016 at 08:21 PM
Two23
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p.11 #13 · Could you go back to film?


The thing about large format (I shoot 4x5 and now also 5x7) isn't just the film size. It's the ability to use lenses from any age. I have a cluster of lenses from 1845-1860 which Civil war re-enactors like portraits from. I have another cluster of lenses from 1905-1928 that the steam threshing people like portraits and machinery shots from. Finally, I have three modern Copal mounted lenses that I can use for flash shots. Large format gives me the ability to replicate the look from many different ages. There is now also available special holders that allow making wet colloidian in a standard 4x5 or 5x7 back. Add in all the lens movements and large format has some serious advantages.


Kent in SD





A few lenses, 1854 to 1928




Dec 25, 2016 at 09:45 PM
gdanmitchell
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p.11 #14 · Could you go back to film?


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Edited on Jan 03, 2017 at 11:41 AM · View previous versions



Dec 25, 2016 at 11:18 PM
Steve Spencer
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p.11 #15 · Could you go back to film?


gdanmitchell wrote:
The latter reason makes some sense to me — it is interesting to understand how different approaches and media work, and experimenting with them is a fine way to learn about them.

The first idea has never made that much sense to me, since I already can and do work slowly and methodically when it suits my purpose for a particular shot. Among the things that digital does, it allows me to work more quickly or to make more exposures when that is important to me, but there is nothing about it that requires me to do so.

Make sense?

Dan


I can see how that would make sense to you, but it wasn't what I was really saying. I know that I can work slowly and methodically with digital and I often do, But working slowly and methodically with large format film I think could be a different experience for me. I expect that if I shoot large format film on most occasion I would make one or maybe two exposures. I could do that with digital of course, but I don't think I ever would.This can be seen as a limit of film and in some ways it is, but it can also be a strength in that it may allow me to plan more thoroughly and think more carefully about the shot. Let's take a simple example in which I want to take a golden hour shot of a waterfall. If I am going to shoot digital for that scenario, I will probably use a number of shutter speeds and shoot in several different types of light and then pick which one I like best afterward. Again that could be seen as a strength of digital that you can take this approach. If I were shooting film, however, I would think more about exactly what shutter speed I wanted (and what ND filter I would use to get it), I would think more about exactly what time (to the minute) I would want to take the shot . That sort of preparation could be done on digital, but in this situation to me it wouldn't make sense. I would shoot the much larger number of images. For film, however, I would do the extra work and the extra thought and in that way even be s slower and more methodical shooter.



Dec 26, 2016 at 01:43 AM
jj_glos
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p.11 #16 · Could you go back to film?


George Orwell wrote:
I chanaged the tone? I am not the first person who made this observation. I posted my comment after another wrote this: "I can't understand the smaller set's contempt for those who do use film."

And I guess you missed these gems:

"35mm film looks ludicrous"

"I shoot film all the time in my horse & buggy. "

"I think it's an absolute waste of time...."

"It [shooting film] seems little more than an exercise in pretentious rusticism to fight our way backwards against clear improvements brought by technological evolution.

"Film? Ho ho ho ho ho ha ha ha hahahaha. Not a chance."

"I see more
...Show more

Apologies, it wasn't you that made the "smaller set's contempt" remark. Again though I have already stated I don't have any bias on this at all.



Dec 26, 2016 at 03:37 AM
jj_glos
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p.11 #17 · Could you go back to film?


PhotoMaximum wrote:
One more pebble to toss on this pile:

Over the years I have really enjoyed visiting galleries and viewing black and white prints shot by great photographers. There is something so "this is part of the music" when being face to face with a Adams, Smith, Maplethorp, Weston, ETC, print...


On a similar note, I love old photographs in museums. It's not really the same seeing them digitised on a screen. The snap below is of a photo in our local regimental museum and packs a lot of detail (not really seen here) and is of the time (world war one, 1916 if I recall correctly):


Soldiers of Gloucestershire Museum by jj_glos, on Flickr



Dec 26, 2016 at 03:53 AM
David Baldwin
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p.11 #18 · Could you go back to film?


I miss the romantic grain of fast film, but I find that my 760D set to ISO 1600 produces images with film-like speckling which I find very satisfying, reminiscent of the moody images of my youth. Here's a film simulation from last week:

http://www.nightfolio.co.uk/night_photography_avebury/Avebury_014.html



Dec 26, 2016 at 04:20 AM
Milan Hutera
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p.11 #19 · Could you go back to film?


George Orwell wrote:
I chanaged the tone? I am not the first person who made this observation. I posted my comment after another wrote this: "I can't understand the smaller set's contempt for those who do use film."

And I guess you missed these gems:

"35mm film looks ludicrous"

"I shoot film all the time in my horse & buggy. "

"I think it's an absolute waste of time...."

"It [shooting film] seems little more than an exercise in pretentious rusticism to fight our way backwards against clear improvements brought by technological evolution.

"Film? Ho ho ho ho ho ha ha ha hahahaha. Not a chance."

"I see more
...Show more

Ah the good old cherry picking from a member who registered here merely days ago... And instantly *liked* by one of the worst troublemakers on this site. Yes, I think it's an absolute waste of time. But you forgot to mention the other part of my post so let me remind you - *unless you're shooting medium or large format*. If you want to shoot 35mm, no one's stopping you. But why would you want to shoot the format that was overtaken by digital about 10 years ago for resolution, cleanness, DR (unless you're shooting some B/W films and speed? Your time. Not mine.



Dec 26, 2016 at 05:23 AM
George Orwell
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p.11 #20 · Could you go back to film?


Milan Hutera wrote:
Ah the good old cherry picking from a member who registered here merely days ago... And instantly *liked* by one of the worst troublemakers on this site. Yes, I think it's an absolute waste of time. But you forgot to mention the other part of my post so let me remind you - *unless you're shooting medium or large format*. If you want to shoot 35mm, no one's stopping you. But why would you want to shoot the format that was overtaken by digital about 10 years ago for resolution, cleanness, DR (unless you're shooting some B/W films and
...Show more

Why would I enjoy 35mm film? Because I like the output it produces as well as the process. How is this not understandable? Do you harangue painters for using an inferior medium too? Can you try to understand that some people dont get much satisfaction from hitting control print, then clicking the print button, and watching a printer produce their print.

Digital, to me, cannot replicate the experience and images I get from 35mm film. That is why I shoot it and will until the last frame of film is made or I take my last breath. Most likely the latter.

Overtaken by digital? Sure, if common metrics is all that defines your photography.




Dec 26, 2016 at 10:15 AM
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