Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/11/09
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Debby Dion wrote: > > Jonathan: > Think what you may; the results are quite beautiful as far as artistic > quality with Leica glass, traditional developing, nikon supercoolscan 2000, > epson stylus 3000 with lyson inks. You are forgetting that it's just a > method of printing. I archive exactly as you do. I save my negatives and > contact sheets; I wouldn't be terribly upset if my "zip disks" became > obsolete. > Debby Dion > Fair enough about artistic quality, this is subjective. To me, the super high gloss Ciba has a three dimensional quality which I like. An added benefit is that the print may in fact have a longer life than the chrome, especially using E-6 films. There is something to be said about the final print, matted and framed and presented, having its own estimated long life span. Unless you are digitally manipulating the image, and hence creating a new art form, I don't see a big benefit to B&W digital printing as the traditional silver techniques are really quite easy and quite inexpensive in comparison, but not everyone has ready access to a darkroom. Where I work we have both a scanner, Epson printer and a darkroom. I once had ready access to an automated Cibachrome processor and frankly its a snap to use ... just expose the sheet and feed it into the machine. Sure its expensive, but so is the scanner and printer, and it doesn't get outdated every 6 months. Jonathan Borden