Southdowns
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This is a question that's bothered me since I started using film again last year.
My process with film (now) is to shoot it, have it developed or develop it myself if it's B&W, then scan and import into Lightroom. I then almost invariably at least tweak the shots a bit, and often do quite a lot more than that. Most of the photo's in this thread are examples of shots that are NOT what came out of the scanner. I think that approach is fairly common in this section of the forum, but I may be wrong? Dare I say it, but if it's not, sometimes I think maybe it should be, as I reasonably often see film shots and think they could do with this or that digital enhancement.
Obviously in the "olden days", unless you printed yourself, the results would not be tweaked at all beyond generic stuff the lab did. If you did print yourself, you could manipulate the results, but never to the extent you can with digital today.
So my question is, hasn't film in a way just become an alternative type of digital sensor? And if so, can we honestly say we achieve results any different to/better than from a digital camera? Should I feel bad about not accepting/presenting what comes out of the camera when shooting film?
My own opinion is that the film based digital sensors that my film cameras have become, have characteristics that inspire different results to my truly digital shots. I could probably achieve almost identical results with my Sony A65 and some PP, but probably wouldn't do because the starting point is different. Add to that the fact that I can change the sensor (film), the fact that shooting film slows the whole process down and forces me to think, the fact that it feels like I'm crafting something when shooting film (even if the results don't always support that), and the fact that the kit is to die for, and I love film in a way that I never will digital. But, pragmatically, is it really that much different?
This isn't about PP vs no PP BTW, more about whether or not what we do in this section really is old school photography at all. I regard photography as the process of producing a communicative image starting with a camera shot, regardless of how the end result is achieved, and think PP is just one essential part of that.
My process with film (now) is to shoot it, have it developed or develop it myself if it's B&W, then scan and import into Lightroom. I then almost invariably at least tweak the shots a bit, and often do quite a lot more than that. Most of the photo's in this thread are examples of shots that are NOT what came out of the scanner. I think that approach is fairly common in this section of the forum, but I may be wrong? Dare I say it, but if it's not, sometimes I think maybe it should be, as I reasonably often see film shots and think they could do with this or that digital enhancement.
Obviously in the "olden days", unless you printed yourself, the results would not be tweaked at all beyond generic stuff the lab did. If you did print yourself, you could manipulate the results, but never to the extent you can with digital today.
So my question is, hasn't film in a way just become an alternative type of digital sensor? And if so, can we honestly say we achieve results any different to/better than from a digital camera? Should I feel bad about not accepting/presenting what comes out of the camera when shooting film?
My own opinion is that the film based digital sensors that my film cameras have become, have characteristics that inspire different results to my truly digital shots. I could probably achieve almost identical results with my Sony A65 and some PP, but probably wouldn't do because the starting point is different. Add to that the fact that I can change the sensor (film), the fact that shooting film slows the whole process down and forces me to think, the fact that it feels like I'm crafting something when shooting film (even if the results don't always support that), and the fact that the kit is to die for, and I love film in a way that I never will digital. But, pragmatically, is it really that much different?
This isn't about PP vs no PP BTW, more about whether or not what we do in this section really is old school photography at all. I regard photography as the process of producing a communicative image starting with a camera shot, regardless of how the end result is achieved, and think PP is just one essential part of that.
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