Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1996/07/06
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]There seems to be a couple of minor things lacking in this discussion of archival images through digital storage means. 1) No scan or CCD generated image is of the quality that an original 35mm negative or transparency is at the present date. The picture elements (pixels) of a piece of 35mm film is orders of magnitude greater than the best scanning equipment can achieve right now (2750-3600dpi seems to be the maximum of available equipment). It seems to me that we're really getting into some limits here. The competing constraints are - the resolution of the lens - the resolution of the film - the quality of an individual image - the resolution of the scanner optics - the resolution of the scanner mechanism - the quantization noise generated by the capturing of a real-valued, analog media into a discrete valued media with regard to bandwidth, etc. 2) That said, there is an odd fallacy in stating that CDROM stored images will only last 20 years because the media will only last that long, if that long. First off, since the information stored on a CDROM is purely a string of numbers, as long as the media's ability to return the numbers is there, you can create exact duplicates of treasured images stored thereon with no generational degradation like would happen with any analog copy process. So what if the media lasts 20 years, or even 3? You can duplicate it long before it becomes unreadable and store a perfect copy of your scanned image through eternity by digitally copying it every three years. Secondly, since CD ROM and writeable CD ROM media has only been in existence a maximum of about 10 years or so, while 3M and other media producers have stated that the expected archival permanence of the media is 20 years, there's really no proof that it's that long or much longer or shorter. I have Audio CDs which date back about 11 years now, which have been played many hundreds of times, and I cannot on an oscilliscope determine any signal degradation. Again, it's just numbers and if the numbers are retrieveable, they signal is able to be duplication without degradation. With the above in mind, my own thoughts on this archival business are ambivalent. Very few images in photography are anything but transient slices of reality, expressions of a moment in time captured through the vision of an artist. Few of them have deathless collectibity. The fact that some very few do and can be deemed 'collectible', well, the fact that they have a lifespan is to the benefit of a collector as they become more valuable over time due to scarcity. Nearly all will outlive the artist, in one form or another, with proper care. Even family pictures which are so precious to you and your children and even your grandchildren become somewhat meaningless after a third generation passes them on ... unless your name happens to be Einstein or Rockefeller or Kennedy or something. I'm more and more moving my photographic processes into the digital domain because they're easier for me to work with given a limited budget and limited facilities that way. I still do B&W printing, rarely, but mostly I just develop negatives and have them mastered to CDROM. Soon I'll have my own film scanner and will put together a photo collection that I'll actually be able to utilize and show easily when people ask. But whether it outlasts me by any substantial fraction of years is questionable in its relevance. The fact that color is transitory is nothing new. How many realize that those gloriously pure white buildings of the Greeks and Romans were gaudily painted in the colors of their day? Perhaps I'll work on that new machine to convert my B&W images to cut granite or alabaster in bas relief and achieve a measure of immortality otherwise unapproachable by any other current photographic media... ]'-) Godfrey