14 Mar 2008 02:22:53 | Tj Tierney
For many, digital photography is a breath of fresh air, but be
wary - believing our landscape images will be superior could be
a serious blunder.
Having lost count of the number of people who have asked me:
"have you gone digital?" I am always left wondering why it's
such a much-asked question. The camera is only a tool in which a
photographer creates an image. His personal ability to create a
unique image remains the same.
For many forms of photography, digital has long held obvious
advantages, but for landscapes the resolution necessary to make
larger prints just wasn't available. But things have changed and
digital cameras are fast becoming the tools that most pros use.
Modern digital cameras are perfectly capably of matching the 35
mm film - the format which most landscape photographers begin
with. But can they really match the large format film cameras?
This is probably the greatest question that all photographers
face.
Instant LCD feedback is digitals greatest gift and this enables
the photographer to check exposure and composition of their
image in the blink of an eye. While this is a big advantage, the
hours spent in front of the computer processing the raw images
have to be a hindrance. A landscape photographers time is best
spent behind a camera not in front of a computer.
The pros and cons of digital photography will remain an issue
for some time. At the end of the day a digital camera won't make
a photographers images better. The same values we apply in our
photography should remain regardless of which camera we use.
Good photography remains as elusive and as enticing as it ever
was; going digital doesn't change this or make getting good
images any easier. It brings technical advantages, and plenty of
them, but the majority of photographic techniques never change.
Good landscape images come from the photographer's personal
ability, not the ability of a camera. The camera helps, but the
creative eye remains the same.
As a landscape photographer I am still hesitant to embrace
digital photography and all the qualities that digital has
brought to other professionals in different photography fields.
There are a few simple reasons that I still use a film camera:
The authenticity of my images could be questioned if I used a
digital camera. It is often assumed that great digital images
have been manipulated. Too much time is spent in front of a
computer. Slide film produce stronger colours than a digital
camera.
There are many advantages for changing to digital but I'm going
to stick with film; for the time-being that is. With time film
cameras will be a thing of the past and all our images will be
exchanged for the pixels. But, be wary - believing our work will
be superior would be falling into a great trap. For me size
matters, the larger I can print an image the better.
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