Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2002/12/07
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I subscribe to Photo Techniques, the US magazine primarily for LF weenies, but also a great bogroom read for wannabees like myself (actually my real reason for subscribing to it is David Vestal's column). While seated upon the aforementioned facility this evening, I came across an article by Paul Schranz in the latest issue (Nov/Dec 02). He writes about "conventional" and digital photography, a sort of personal odyssey through technology and back. In this, we can find the following sentences: Film is still the best means of recording an image. The best scanners do not yet meet the richness of data that is available on film. Inevitably, that time will come, as will digital camera quality. I, for one, don't think that that time will ever come. Like most areas of technology, what drives development is economy. If there is little or no economic incentive of developing a digital sensor for cameras, or a scanner, that matches or surpasses chemical film, then it is unlikely that it will happen. Fine art photographers seem to be split in two communities: those who vow to continue with film, printing on fibre paper to archival standards, and those who dabble with digital images at some point in the process. (An interesting aside is a group who belong to the former, but still use computers to produce masks which are subsequently sandwiched with the original negative for [contact] printing.) The most fervent arguments about quality seem to be raged in this community. Is digital good enough? Can you tell the difference between a chemical print and an inkjet print? In reality, fine art photographers don't count worth a toss. They're about as important to the those that fund the digital photography development as the super-heavy-weight vinyl LP weenies are to the music industry. What matters are large volume, commercial photographers and the general public. I'd guess that the commercial photographers that count are (a) advertizing, (b) press. Both of these are characterized by a degree of ephemerality where convenience and "good enough" are more important than whether something is qualitatively the same as a archival, selenium toned, fibre print at 20x24" from an 8x10" T-MAX 100 negative observed through a 5x Schneider loupe. The same goes for the general public: good enough is good enough. What will happen is that digital (camera) technology will improve to the point where three things coincide: (a) tiered quality and pricing ("consumer", "prosumer", "professional"); (b) quality improvements until "good enough" (given the application area) has been reached; (c) ease-of-use issues, convenience, and infra-structure break above the cost-of-entry for new consumers. Once this happens, improvements will not be in the direction of the information capacity of the digital technology and this will probably happen well before digital devices come even close to (i.e., several orders-of-magnitude away from) capturing the amount of information that film does. And, just as you can still buy tube amps, and play new LPs on recently manufactured turntables, I suspect that film will be around for a long while yet. Existing in a somewhat marginal role, but still existing in parallel with digital imaging. M. - -- To unsubscribe, see http://mejac.palo-alto.ca.us/leica-users/unsub.html