Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2009/11/08
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]When someone says he or she prefers silver or c-prints to digital ones, there seems to be a strong reaction from the digital printers. To me, these people seem to be overreacting. The struggle between digital and the darkroom is over. Digital won. How could it not? Photographers on deadline can produce images faster; editors can have raw files in their hands almost immediately. News editors can easily see what was done at an event and not fret they are going to miss deadline waiting for chemistry to do its thing. And of course, parents can email pictures of the their babies to the grandparents. Then there's Photoshop. Such control. You don't have to be Houdini to do dodging and burning. There's much to say for it. When I look at digital images that have been printed well, I always says "that's pretty darn good." Nevertheless, I feel silver black and white photographs have a quality that ink sprayed on paper just doesn't get. The images are in the paper, not on the surface. Posters are posters afterall. I feel the same way about c-prints. When a great printer makes them, they look great. For me, the problem with digital prints is that it's ink sprayed on paper. It's highly refined poster making. You don't have to be an elitist to see the difference. I do both digital and darkroom. Both have their virtues, but to my eyes--maybe not to yours--the darkroom prints done by a master please me more than the digital work of a similar quality. To me, they have more life. That's just an opinion. Doug