Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2017/06/07
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Ahh Mark, you missed Dan's point. Shooting/developing analogue brings back memories. I agree with much of what you post, but it is irrelevant to anything Dan said... But that's ok.. Bob Adler www.robertadlerphotography.com *"Capturing Light One Frame At A Time"* On Wed, Jun 7, 2017 at 1:56 PM, Mark Rabiner <mark at rabinergroup.com> wrote: > I?ve seen this a lot on the internet and it?s not true or don?t agree with > it? it?s not true. But it?s really out there being passed around big time > and achieving some unfortunate credulity as that?s how information spreds > now. The better virus wins. And you never know which Meme will fly and > which will die. > And that?s this backing up to analog as if chemistry based stuff is more > archival than digital. Or just thinking you are covered if you have a film > or paper copy of something. > When we all first heard about this new digital thing coming out the basic > idea behind the whole thing was the advantage of digital is its digital. > You make a copy of the thing and the it?s a clone not a copy. It?s the > same only it exists in a different space. For photography that?s > revolutionary. Because in the past when make a copy of a negative or of a > print and hold them side by side and they are no way identical. The ?copy? > of the thing in most cases is a sad joke. So, you try to avoid copies. You > cover yourself as you?re shooting. You go ?click? a bunch of times not just > once or twice. The best copy or backup is another origional. > More to the point is the reality that the minute your film is dry or your > print is dry it starts decomposing; leaking gasses, fading, and staining, > changing color. Film and prints exist in the organic carbon based world > just like people and trees. Film is made from dead bunnies (the gelatin). > Prints are made from that and cotton and wood. Just like people they are > dying the minute they are born. Returning to the earth from whence they > came? > So your film based print and the film itself is not the same image as > every day goes by. Every day in every way your print is worser and worser. > Film too. Not as much. > This is a main advantage not disadvantage of digital. It?s a plus check > not a minus. You could claim to hate the ?digital look? but go with it > anyway because it lasts forever. Its digital. Other than the small > possibility of an isolated file getting corrupted when you go to your > digital file to Photoshop it again to print it or put it up on the internet > again a decade or so later you?re NOT dealing with a faded different > version of the thing. In digital if you can get that single file open it?s > the same file you dealt the first-time decades going by. Not one 100000th > of a percent different. > And if that file doesn?t open you grab another older backup hard disk and > it will. > In the past decade, my digital body of work is on hard disks and right > here near me. My chemical body of work is in a storage cubicle with fumes > coming out of each and every print and neg and slide. I?ve not seen it in > a few days I hope to soon and I don?t pass out from the gasses as I open > the door. > By the way if one print or roll of film is under fixed or under washed it > gives off a lot more and nastier gases than the stuff which was properly > fixed and washed sitting near it or in the same closet. So, the properly > processed stuff is probably fading at an accelerated rate too. > The chemical analog workflow is messy. The advantages are hard to find. > And if there are any advantages to film archivalness is not one of them. > > -- > > Mark William Rabiner > Photographer > > On 6/7/17, 4:14 AM, "LUG on behalf of Dan Khong" <lug-bounces+mark= > rabinergroup.com at leica-users.org on behalf of dankhong at gmail.com> > wrote: > > I just souped a roll of Tri-X and waiting to send it to the pro-lab to > have > it scanned into digital. After that, I have the options of two work > processes - digital and analog. And my negatives will serve as my > archival > backup. > > All said, 90% of my B&W pics (100% of color) are now taken on digital, > but > it's the last bit that is analog that gives me memories that spans > back 50 > years when film was there in the most impressionable years of my life. > Those were the days of Nam and protest songs, and growing up into > adulthood. > > Dan K. > > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information > > > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information