Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2003/03/14
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]When I was living in Columbus, OH, I had a wet darkroom built out of my bathroom. I was fortunate enough to have a bathroom with no windows, good ventilation, and a little antechamber which could be sectioned off from the main hall with a dark cloth, where I could put my enlarger. Now I find myself in Santa Cruz, in a wonderful location a mere 200m from the beach, but it turns out that when you build a house 200m from the beach, you put windows absolutely everywhere. While my current bathroom is larger than some appartments I've stayed in, there are two problems: 1) It is difficult to get dark, without completely rebuilding it -- at least, not without doing the kinds of modifications that landlords usually frown upon and I find that landlords invent enough excuses to keep your security deposit as it is, without handing them additional ones. 2) The combination of temperature, humidity, and the lack of central heating means that my bathroom is rarely above 12 C. So, factoring all of these things together, plus the recent sale of an R2, a 25mm Skopar and some other assorted stuff, meant that I decided to go digital for now. Ultimately, I'd much rather be a wizard in the wet darkroom than in a digital one... but I'd also much rather be able to produce prints of *some* kind than not at all. So, a $299 film scanner (Minolta Dimage Dual Scan III) and a $249 printer (Canon i950) and four weeks later, I find myself thinking about the similarities and differences between wet darkrooms (henceforth just "darkroom") and digital darkrooms (henceforth just "computer"). One of the greatest aspects of a darkroom is that feeling of magic. If you've ever been in a darkroom, you know the feeling when you start seeing the print tones come up in the developer. As if conjured up by some invisible genie and secret incantations, aided by metol, images appear as if my magic, from thin air (or rather, from thick solutions). I know people who, fifty years after they first saw a print form in the developer, are as fascinated and as enthralled by this as the first time. And I'm pretty sure that, four decades from now, I will be the same. No amount of experience with the phenomenon seems to detract from that sense of wonderment as a white paper suddenly darkens and shows a familiar face or an exotic location. The computer affords no such experience. Which, to me, is the biggest difference between darkrooms and computers. On the whole, working with photography on the computer is a more cerebral experience; working with photography in the darkroom is a more emotional (or visceral) experience. I've found myself thinking "yes, that looks about right" when working in Photoshop, while in the darkroom, I used to think "yeah, that feels about right". I think that this comes from the fundamentally different pace of working in the two media. On the computer, you're leaping across a pond, from one stepping stone to another, always with the option of going back one stone should you take the wrong path. As you jump, you rest on the new stone and view your surroundings. Do they look right? Are you going where you want to? Did you get your feet wet yet? Can you make that next leap over the intermediate stone, or should you take it stepwise more slowly? Working in the computer introduces natural pausing points. I find myself doing one thing, stopping, and evaluating the outcome before going on. There are no time constraints. It takes an almost fixed amount of time to do any one operation (they are for the most part instantaneous) after which you can then rest indefinately before moving on with the next step. Indeed, sometimes I save a snapshot of the whole process, just by saving the file, and then pick up the following day where I left off. It's a staccato dance towards the envisioned result. One step, pause, two step, pause, etc., a tango with the left hand side of the brain leading a few steps, then stopping, twisting around and looking back, then forward, then another few swirling steps. A stepwise walkabout across an unfamiliar landscape, but always one step at the time, and always with the opportunity to stop, and survey the route you took to get here. The end result is interesting. Not only do you have the result in the form of the photograph itself, which, as always, depending upon your skill and willingness to experiment, may or may not look like the envisioned product, but the process is self-documenting. With the modern tools available, each step can be saved separate from the previous and subsequent ones. You can go back to the original image, by playing the sequence in reverse, then forward, and (again) observing how the changes take place before your eyes. Or break the sequence and play it out of order. Looking back, I realize that I never did this staccato dance in the darkroom. The necessity to traverse the (perhaps) unfamiliar landscape towards the end result still remains, but with each new print, you'd start from the same starting point. Then, with a plan in mind, in one continuous flow, you'd set off, skipping, running, scrambling across the landscape until you come to a stop -- a print. There was no pausing along the way, no stopping and looking back. Instead of the stepwise hopping, darkroom work seems to be characterized by a flow of activity that, once initiated, has to pour out in one continuous stream, or you'll never get across the terrain at all. I've always felt a parallel (rightly or wrongly) between photography and music. When I see a very good photograph, as a print or on the screen, I "hear" music. Photography to me is all about capturing moods, emotions, a sense of place, the essence of someone's personality, and music has often been used to do the same. So, for me, it is only natural that the two complement each other. Interestingly enough, while on occasion I see (fuzzy, fleeting, mental) images when listening to music, it's much more rare. Stetching the simile to absurdity, I feel that computer-based photography is about timbre, pitch, and harmony. Darkroom work is about rhythm and pacing. Timing is all but unimportant in the computer, but is central to darkroom work. I cannot imaging how you'd produce prints in a darkroom without rhythm, timing, and sequence, while in the computer, I find myself inventing strategies that allow to me accomplish (much) the same thing by specifically avoiding them. So, my conclusions? I think the main insight is that there is no such thing as a "digital darkroom". While you can produce and manipulate photographic images in both darkrooms and in (on?) computers, and while you can arrive at more or less the same result, the two experiences are fundamentally different. I'm very happy that I have a computer, a film scanner, and an inkjet printer, because it allows me to close the photographic loop that has been open for too long. As such, I find myself embarking on photography with renewed enthusiasm, and a desire to learn more about how I see the world and the kinds of photographs which I take. I delight in the ability to produce prints and give to friends and family, and the simple conversation pieces that a photograph, or a collection of photographs, can be. But I yearn for the day when I can have a permanent darkroom in a home of my own and can experience that magic taking place in the trays. M. - -- To unsubscribe, see http://mejac.palo-alto.ca.us/leica-users/unsub.html