Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/06/21
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Bill Welch wrote: <<As for the paperless future, didn't we hear that years ago, and yet we still drown in tree pulp in most homes and offices? Put me down as a skeptic. >>>> Hi Bill, I think this kinda says it all, as that was the big super selling job a few years ago and it has just meant we are using more paper than ever. I feel film and souping are here for a along time yet, as the situation is the same fashion as the stories when photography came about. The artist communities and nay sayers were going on about photography being the end of "art as we know it!" Which of course turned out pure rubbish. To-day more artists than ever use photography to capture many of their images and paint them on canvas or paper months and sometimes years later. So in that sense, I feel artists andfilm are here to stay as long as there are "photographers!" And it will be some time before the digigraphers completely take over the image making. Until the day a digital camera can produce the same quality as a Kodachrome, Velvia or Kodak 100sw image, then we can start thinking the end of film. Until then I'm keeping my darkroom at the ready! :) Speaking about film, have any of you tried the new Kodak Chromegenic B&W C41 film? I have been experimenting with it and it's quite incredible for quality. And just like shooting colour neg film you whip it into the lab, they soup and give you B&W contacts that are B&W! And not a sick looking sepia. We have not had any lab enlargements made as yet, but will be next week and we also will be making prints in our own darkroom operation for a comparison. To date I would say this film is going to open the B&W market up to a major amount of amature and pros who would have shot B&W but didn't have a darkroom or the where with all to spend time in the darkroom. You all have shot col. neg, selected from the contacts and returned the negs to the lab for 8X10's, 11-14's and larger, so this film will allow you to do exactly the same with B&W. And if the quality we are finding on the contact sheets is any indication of what we expect to see in enlargements, "Hello World here cames a whole new dimension of B&W photography the likes we haven't seen in some time. This film is wild, as you can be shooting outside at ASA 100 and then go inside reset the meter to 800 and continue shooting exposures on the same roll and the negs are capturing the light and producing beautiful negatives. Any comments from others who have had a run at it? ted Victoria, Canada http://www.islandnet.com/~tedgrant