Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/01/22
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Yeah! If they stop making film, I'll never get to satisfy my new 8x10 contact printing fetish! Not to mention rendering my hard won M6's just a couple of lovely paper weights :-) Anyway, I hope a few companies at least keep the B&W film tradition alive. I'm not usually optimistic, but I somehow can picture a future where the B&W film niche survives. Scott Norm Aubin wrote: > Greetings all, > >I have to say, I'm not convinced that film is going to die out. Ted spoke >rather pointedly on it just a bit ago, and I have to agree very >whole-heartedly. Film is too good at what it does to just go away. While >digital is the cat's meow for many uses (the two extremes of professional >and auntie's happy snap family shots, for example), there is still a fairly >large base of dedicated pro's and amateurs out there. > >If anything is likely over the next two decades, I suspect it will be a >rationalization of the suppliers in response to this smaller market. >Smaller does not mean non-existent though, so I feel that there will always >be a few makers who address this need. > >Western Europe, the Americas & the eastern rim of the Pacific are all places >where there is a good deal of wealth, so the digital infrastructure of >capture and print or display on PC are all fairly achievable. A significant >portion of the world is not ready to consume in the manner of these >aforementioned countries though, and they serve as a possible source of >revenue for film and paper distribution. That may change in time, as may >all things, but probably not tomorrow. > >Similarly Daguerreotype, Wet plate, dry plate, albumen prints, Bromoil >prints, platinum prints, and a host of other surpassed technologies flourish >in their own underground. Even if film is transcended by digital >recordings of Star Trek Tricorder quality, full color and 3-D viewing, there >is still going to be an art market for 'old fashioned' media, because >photographs, and particularly platinum and silver gelatin prints, have a >"Fine Art" cachet of artifact, not just image. It may be less convenient >than it was; you may not be able to go down to your favorite camera store >and select from 11-teen films and papers, but there will be a source for >this stuff. The big names may not develop new and better films using >wondrous technologies, but that's okay too, the current stuff ain't too bad. >The internet may become your local store, and fed-ex your supplier man! > >I cut my teeth on Tri-X and Kodachrome, still love them above all others, >but I use Ilford Delta films, Fuji chrome films, Bergger B&W films, Maco IR, >and am getting ready to try the Efke films soon. I love Xtol, prefer >Perceptol, use a catichol based developer almost exclusively now, but have >hand mixed from raw other developers that I'd go back to in a pinch. As >long as I have Photoshop and any, repeat any film, I can probably get to >whatever result I want, but I'm glad to think that that is not likely to be >an issue for the next few decades, if ever. > >Someday digital capture may get so damn good that I will abandon film >completely, although I think I won't. For the same reason I learned >daguerreotype, and platinum printing, I think I will still have a place for >film, and a willingness to find some where ever it is available, it still >does some things that digital will not, and enough people believe that to >keep it alive for a long time yet. > >I'm an optimist, that's why I shoot for the secrets and develop for the >surprises. > > >Best of light, >Norm > > > -- Pics @ http://www.adrenaline.com/snaps Leica M6TTL, Bessa R, Nikon FM3a, Nikon D70, Rollei AFM35 (Jihad Sigint NSA FBI Patriot Act)