ujjwaldey8165
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- 1,842
- Name
- Ujjwal
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Lets analyse this by each user group
The Rank Amateurs :Ceratinly digital has helped proliferation of photogpahing snapshots. Low cost, easy access, and ease of usage has encouraged many to take photographs, who would have otherwise not bothered. Camera in the phone has also helped instant documentation of events; that usually relied on journalists. Overall effect - positive
The Photo-Entusiasts : better quality lens and camera have certainly helped more people become enthusiasts. Access to digital darkrooms ( though arguably, this can be true for scanned film images as well) have encouraged many to experiment with their creative side. This has also created a new style of image creation; that was difficult, and sometimes impossible with a film set-up. Also this has made possible for more to aspire making a living out of photographing ( not necessarily making better images, but becoming a professional photographer) - low cost and easy usage has helped this process. On the downside, this has eaten into the existing professional market; and arguably sometimes lowered the standard of professional photography. ( lower the barrier to entry, lower the standards in a unregulated market. Food for thought : will this lead to some sort of industry regulation, or self governance?).
Overall effect : positive
The event Photography :
Photographers perspective : Has made it faster, sometimes easier and arguably improved quality. Certain class of event photography has vastly improved ( at a similar price point, relative to the film days).
Clients perspective : Made it accessible and cheap. Imcreased expectation - higher quality at a lower cost. Lower barrier of entry means larger pool of photographers, means increased competition, leading to low cost. But, ownership of a camera does not imply higher skills anymore; therefore clients have to learn how to choose photographers to suit their need.
Overall effect : positive; with some changing market dynamics
Photo-journalism : The biggest impact here is the speed and quality of reportage. Both has improved. However since media has now acces to on-the-spot photographs from all the sections ( Amateurs etc); the job of journalists have been made that much difficult. Again effect is positive for the general public and news media; but possible worse for the reporters; and definitely for the non-democratic government. The only possibly issue is ease of digital manipulation; which can bring into question the authenticity of the photograph itself - more than the ones via a film negative.
Film enthusiasts : Perversely, they are possibly the biggest beneficiary of the digital revolution. Cameras which were utterly out of their reach has suddenly become available - to the point that many of them are like a kid in a candy shop, buying whatever they fancy, and living out their gadget-fantasy ( ask me!)
Photography -as-an-art : This is more difficult; unless one is willing to class any image that has somewhere been through a camera lens as a photograph. For the purist; art has suffered due to excessive digital manipulation; the moderinst will argue that digital art is merely an evolution of the fine traditions of Bresson, Adams et al. The argument over this is possibly the most emotional; not in the least because art never had a universally agreed definition.
The Rank Amateurs :Ceratinly digital has helped proliferation of photogpahing snapshots. Low cost, easy access, and ease of usage has encouraged many to take photographs, who would have otherwise not bothered. Camera in the phone has also helped instant documentation of events; that usually relied on journalists. Overall effect - positive
The Photo-Entusiasts : better quality lens and camera have certainly helped more people become enthusiasts. Access to digital darkrooms ( though arguably, this can be true for scanned film images as well) have encouraged many to experiment with their creative side. This has also created a new style of image creation; that was difficult, and sometimes impossible with a film set-up. Also this has made possible for more to aspire making a living out of photographing ( not necessarily making better images, but becoming a professional photographer) - low cost and easy usage has helped this process. On the downside, this has eaten into the existing professional market; and arguably sometimes lowered the standard of professional photography. ( lower the barrier to entry, lower the standards in a unregulated market. Food for thought : will this lead to some sort of industry regulation, or self governance?).
Overall effect : positive
The event Photography :
Photographers perspective : Has made it faster, sometimes easier and arguably improved quality. Certain class of event photography has vastly improved ( at a similar price point, relative to the film days).
Clients perspective : Made it accessible and cheap. Imcreased expectation - higher quality at a lower cost. Lower barrier of entry means larger pool of photographers, means increased competition, leading to low cost. But, ownership of a camera does not imply higher skills anymore; therefore clients have to learn how to choose photographers to suit their need.
Overall effect : positive; with some changing market dynamics
Photo-journalism : The biggest impact here is the speed and quality of reportage. Both has improved. However since media has now acces to on-the-spot photographs from all the sections ( Amateurs etc); the job of journalists have been made that much difficult. Again effect is positive for the general public and news media; but possible worse for the reporters; and definitely for the non-democratic government. The only possibly issue is ease of digital manipulation; which can bring into question the authenticity of the photograph itself - more than the ones via a film negative.
Film enthusiasts : Perversely, they are possibly the biggest beneficiary of the digital revolution. Cameras which were utterly out of their reach has suddenly become available - to the point that many of them are like a kid in a candy shop, buying whatever they fancy, and living out their gadget-fantasy ( ask me!)
Photography -as-an-art : This is more difficult; unless one is willing to class any image that has somewhere been through a camera lens as a photograph. For the purist; art has suffered due to excessive digital manipulation; the moderinst will argue that digital art is merely an evolution of the fine traditions of Bresson, Adams et al. The argument over this is possibly the most emotional; not in the least because art never had a universally agreed definition.

