Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/10/21
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]There was a time, early on in the advent of colour photography for the masses, that more images "worked" in colour...simply because it was new and exciting and *colourful*. Now that viewers are saturated (pardon the unintentional pun) with colour images, I think that it is requiring more and more ingenuity to impart visual impact to colour images than it once was. OTOH, practitioners of B&W have never had the luxury of the colour palette and, as you say, *blood sweat and tears*...or at least substantial purposeful forethought...has always been required to produce the finest work in that medium. Regards, Nigel On Tue, 20 Oct 1998 22:03:25 -0700 Jim Brick <jim@brick.org> writes: >Back when I started in photography, I was in Junior Hi, 8th grade, 13 >years >old, 1951. The science teacher, Guy Cochran, started a photography >club, >and taught us how to develop film. No reels, the yo-yo method. We made >contact prints using a print frame and goose neck lamp. My camera was >a 120 >folding camera. Sometime that year I bought an old Federal enlarger >and set >it up in my bedroom closet on a card table. At some point in the next >couple of years, I bought a Rolleicord. My uncle, in Baker Oregon, >owned >the local drug store which had a photo department. I got it at cost. I >took >pictures for the High School yearbook. Everything until now was B&W. >While >in HS, I used some Ektachrome (E2) and processed it myself at home (E2 >kit). It turned out great and I still have the 2-1/4 slides. Somewhat >faded, but there. I went to Oregon State College engineering school. I >belonged to the photo club and took pictures for the year book. Except >for >the Ektachrome while in HS, everything was still B&W. After OSC (OSU >now) I >went to Brooks Institute of Photography. > >At Brooks, in 1960, you start with only a view camera, incident meter, >and >B&W film. Super XX. You learn everything there is to know about >compression, expansion, gamma, dynamic range, etc, etc, etc... All >work >(assignments) is printed and mounted on matt board, every week, for >critique. All B&W. Minimum 8x10, max 16x20. Normally work was printed >11x14. About the second year into Brooks, I learned both type-C >printing >and Dye Transfer. Over the past thirty years, I've printed a lot of >B&W, >Type-C, and Cibachromes. > >I had to give some history to show that I've paid my dues in B&W. > >The bottom line to this story... B&W photography is immensely more >difficult than color. To make negatives that contain the proper >dynamic >range, you must calculate the proper exposure (not necessary the gray >card >value - as is the normal case with color). Processing method is >dependent >upon the brightness ratio of the scene and where in the brightness >range >you put the exposure. And what you envision the result looking like. >You >also should record the brightness range to determine the proper >development >procedure. THEN!!! you have to print it. Which paper grade, which >paper, >which developer, how to dodge, how to burn, etc, etc, etc... The >negative >scale may not match he paper you want. Or any paper. There are >decisions at >every step, from the vision, to the dried print, that can make or >break >your result. And the final print is simply black, white, and whatever >mid >gray tones you have managed to keep or want. The result must have >impact, >contrast, dynamic range, form, composition, and all the things that >quite >often don't matter when you use color. This is difficult to do well. >It's >even more difficult with roll film because you have to process the >whole >roll the same way. > >Many of my large Cibachromes are simply photographs of nice >landscapes. >People really like them. They are straight prints of transparencies. >No >mask, nothing. They would be extremely difficult to do in B&W. Trees, >hills, sky? Not exactly thrilling. Dark blue sky, lighter blue ocean >water, >whitish sand, yellow-white rocks and cliffs in color, work. Not >necessarily >in B&W. Unless the lighting or some other dramatic effect is present. >Color >works when there is only color. B&W takes a lot of work, special >lighting, >something to make an impact. Not just a pleasant scene. > > >Maybe I'm just dumber than the average photographer??? But good color >just >happens. Good B&W is a hellova lot of work! And even after one hellova >lot >of sweat and work, the result might still be only mediocre. > >Take two cameras, one with color, the other with B&W. Take the exact >same >photographs with both. Print both color and B&W prints (8x10 or >better). >Typically, more color photographs work than B&W, simply because of the >color. After taking the photograph, most of the color work is done. >The B&W >work has just begun. > >Jim > >PS... Of course there are exceptions to everything. What I've covered >above >is what I consider to be the norm. You can indeed have a difficult >time >with color. But on the average, it is easier to garner good results >with >color, than B&W. > >PPS... Look at Ansel Adams prints. These were "created" in the >darkroom. >Blood, sweat, and tears (sounds like a band :) went into the print. >The >actual photographing of the scene was typically but an instant in the >weeks >and months required to make the first acceptable gallery quality >print. >After once made, the process was recorded and subsequent prints were >much >easier. > > ___________________________________________________________________ You don't need to buy Internet access to use free Internet e-mail. Get completely free e-mail from Juno at http://www.juno.com or call Juno at (800) 654-JUNO [654-5866]