Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/10/21
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]LUGgers, I have enjoyed this discussion of b&w/color because, while I much prefer b&w for most applications, I shoot mostly slides due to the ease and instant gratification. B&w represents a lot of work for me since, like many of you, I develop the film and make the prints myself. If I want a Cibachrome, on the other hand, I have someone do it for me. So I'm interested in Steve's comments (below) regarding the relative ease of using Photoshop for b&w. Please forgive my ignorance, but I have no idea what the cuKrrent potential is for digitally produced b&w prints. I have always assumed that there is NOTHING like a silver b&w print and that great b&w digital is years off. Am I wrong here? Given a reasonable computer, scanner, and printer investment (don't ask me what's "reasonable"!), does digital b&w quality compare well with silver prints? If so, maybe I need to give it a try. Thanks. John McLeod - ------------ >From: "Stephen Kobrin" <kobrins@wharton.upenn.edu> >To: "Leica-Users (E-mail)" <leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us> >Subject: [Leica] B&W and color >Date: Wed, Oct 21, 1998, 2:49 PM > >There is often an assumption on the LUG that there is a right and wrong or >better and worse choice for the topic at hand. Rangefinders vs. SLRs, Leica >vs. anything else, and B&W vs. color are examples. I suspect that much of >the time it comes down to what one likes or does not like, especially for >those of us who do photography as a hobby. Thus, while there are obviously >"objective" differences between B&W and color, I wonder if for most of us, >most of the time, it is really a matter of personal perference. > >I like B&W. While I shoot a lot of color, I find that the prints that >really mean something to me, as opposed to creatively recording a scene, >tend to be B&W rather than color. I find it much easier to visualize the >end result if it is B&W and much, much easier to "print" via Photoshop. That >is not to say it is easier, just that I find it easier. For example, I >typically print using tritones and can usually play with curves and colors >and make ordered choices in terms of my preferences. When I try to color >correct a print I just have no idea what is going on. > >I find that B&W tends to abstract a bit from reality and let me express what >I feel or what I see in my mind's-eye much more easily than color. I also >find that I am really "turned on" by a nice tonal range in a B&W print. I >find colors,even when they are nicely saturated and balanced, a more >superficial visual experience. > >Again, this is all subjective. But that is the great thing about >photography as a hobby. I am an academic and have lots of people tell me >what is wrong with what I write in great detail. If I like a print, that is >all that matters. > >Steve > > >