Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2010/01/12
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]> > On Jan 12, 2010, at 18:30, Mark Rabiner wrote: >> >> I spent decades going to a rental color lab on a regular basis where I >> made >> my color prints with an omega head and a Kreonite processor. Both color >> neg >> and direct positive. >> For a first test print to come out with the snow showing 10 or 15 points >> magenta was nothing. Its a first test. You correct it. >> You don't go out and buy an new enlarger or a new brand paper. >> There's nothing phony about it either. >> The magenta is not suppose to be there. >> Its called crafting a print. >> And nowadays maybe there's no paper. >> Your crafting an Jpeg. There's no paper. >> >> To me not having Photoshop is like you want to do it without an omega >> head. >> Which you could easily do if you wanted to hire somebody to Photoshop all >> your pix for you. Which I think would make you amazingly lazy. >> We can learn new stuff here just because we're older than 2 or 3 decades >> old. >> > > I have never enjoyed darkroom work. I did a lot of B&W printing in high > school > and very little since then. I don't like the smell, the chemicals, and the > long hours trying to manipulate the negative to get the perfect print. It's > why I shot Kodachrome for many years. But that is my perspective. > > I admire people who can do magic with PS. I remember when Tina made someone > disappear from her picture (from China I think that had a wall in the > background) a few years ago in an hour or 2. [Bowing to a mistress of PS > :-)) > ] > > Could I master PS? Of course, given the time. I find, most of the time, the > simple control in something like Aperture is plenty for my need (cropping, > correct colour temperature, and that's about all). But to me, PS is the > digital darkroom. Whatever I need to know to accomplish my goals and that > is > good enough. > > It's not a question of learning something new. In my field, if you cannot > learn a new technology every 18 months or less (again and again), you are > very > obsolete. It's just my brain is too small and I have to pick what I stuff > inside. All the extra bits dribbles out the ears. > > The only client I really have to keep happy is me, fortunately. :-) > > Regards, > Spencer > > Yes but your the one with tens of thousands of dollars of photo gear who does not know how to get rid of a simple 12 point magenta correction. A thing any kid with Photoshop could do in a minute and not think twice about it afterwards. Mark William Rabiner