Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2004/09/25
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I'm going to quibble with John a little bit in a few areas. First - for amateurs digital is a release from the perceived expense of film, processing and printing. Released from the boundary of buying film, paying to have it processed, and then looking through disappointing prints, digital users can shoot more and learn more. Our experience has been that most digital photographs are seldom printed. My wife is the primary digital user in our family. She publishes her work seamlessly on the net through iPhoto, sharing it with family and friends. If she makes and image that someone likes (and she's doing it more and more these days) then she writes it to CD or sends it via e-mail. She has a decent HP color printer, a paper that works for her, and if she really cares I do some photoshop manipulation and print it on the 2200 for her. And when we get back from a shoot she plugs in the camera and downloads to the computer. Sharing is easy - not as good as projecting slides but we never, ever do that anyway. We plug into the TV from the computer over a digital link and show the images that way. It will be nice to be able to send HD images in a few years. I can't find a way to do it now. BUT...for someone with an investment in film, in slides, in projecting, then staying with film makes all the sense in the world. But I still submit that being able to throw away mistakes "for free" makes digital incredibly attractive. This from a kid who had to justify every photo I ever took with parents who critiqued each frame, questioned the value of what I shot, and suggested I "use less film." Bah! Never again. Adam