Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/04/04
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Walt Johnson wrote: > So far, it seems there are about three of us on the LUG using Kodak UC. Walt, Make that four. I don't shoot much color film. Or at least I didn't for a while. I thought digital was the way to go for color. But I'm back to using film. And UC is my choice. I'm not a high volume shooter and film just works out better for me. I think more before I shoot. I like the equipment more (I mainly use Ms, but I also have a Contax T2). I end up getting prints of everything, which I think is an underrated benefit. When I shoot digital I never print every frame. So sometimes I think I'm missing out because looking at images on screen just isn't the same for me as viewing prints. Some might see shooting film as a waste of money, but I really try and make the most of every shot. I get a lot of satisfaction from a nice full frame print, even if that print was printed by WalMart or Costco. I'm more of a "point-of-capture" person, rather than a post production person these days. I think I may be burnt out on Photoshop, and maybe on the whole digital thing for now. I have a ton of 4x6 prints fromn film on display in my home and in my office. Finding beautiful frames -- whether at discount shops, or flea markets, or anyplace -- is almost as much fun as photography. Here's why I think displaying images is important. There are photos I've had up for a month that I really didn't notice or care for. Suddenly I'll grow attached to them. They're images that otherwise wouldn't have deserved a second look on a CRT and would have been lost in the digital scrap heap. I usually swap out prints on display after a month or two. I thought that shooting volume with digital really taught me some good lessons, and it did. But I can say the same about putting prints on display and looking at them over and over. It's a different type of lesson, but maybe even more valuable for evaluating photography. If you're photographing to make prints then you need to study prints. That's just my feeling, right or wrong. I've noticed that when I first look at one of my prints I get really caught up in all the little faults. I see things that I feel I should have done differently -- whether it's framing or DOF, or lighting, or your name it. But after a while I begin to overlook the flaws (at least the little ones) and I see things from a different perspective. I get beyond technique and take the image more for what it is. There's no perfect image, anyway. By the way, this obsession with perfection strikes me even harder with digital. But more in the post processing stage. I know I can fix a lot of things. But if I start taking that approach I end up spending more time than if I'd just shot film. I really think there's a place for digital in volume shooting. But I think we've gone overboard in the sense of saying it's right for everyone. I'm not sure that things weren't better for a lot of people back when film was the only medium of choice. Films area amazingly good today. UC is pretty amazing stuff. daveR.