Kodak To Stop Making Black and White Paper 501
Swirsky writes "For those of us who remember spending quality time in a dark room with Kodak Rapid RC paper and a bottle of Dektol, here's some bad news - Kodak will stop making black and white photographic paper. Black and white photo work (especially because you can use a safelight!) is a wonderful way of introducing someone to photography. I guess if we want to do it, we'll have to use home-made emulsions on paper. As a pro photographer, I'm bothered by this, though admittedly I haven't done b/w darkroom work in years."
Kodak... (Score:2)
Digital? (Score:3, Informative)
Digital isn't always better (Score:5, Insightful)
Here's my point...I could go into a camera store that sells used equipment, buy a Leica from the 40's or 50's and still run film through it. Will people still be running a digital camera they buy today 60 years from now? Will they even be able to get the info off of it?
You could take a negative from Ansel Adams that he made way back in the 20's and still make a very find, high quality print today. Don't have to worry about making any interface or program to read the data or worry if the media is still viable on a disk somewhere. Hell, with his 8x10 negs you don't even need an enlarger, could make a contact print with a lightbulb if you wanted.
Digital photos taken today won't be around 60 years from now...sorry, but that's the fact. You would constantly have to keep upgrading and transfering your shots to the latest storage medium just to keep up. Can anyone honestly say that you'll be able to read a CD 60 years from now to get the pictures off? Maybe if you find an old computer in an antique shop...maybe.
Not to mention the fact that the camera you buy today is obsolete a year from now when something better AND cheaper comes along.
I don't know, there are a lot of questions that need to be answered.
Re:Digital isn't always better (Score:5, Insightful)
There used to be a huge stack - mostly he used glass plates. Very durable this stuff, but heavy - so of course some 20 years after his death someone threw them away. Most of the pictures were lost, only the slowly-fading paper prints were left. My uncle painstakingly scanned all these and put them on CDROM. Now almost everybody in my family has the CD.
Sure, the CD-format won't be around forever, but once the next format comes around I can easily copy stuff over - it will be very little work (especially compared with the first conversion to digital). As long as somebody cares enough about the pictures, it will be easy to preserve them. And of course, if nobody cares about the pictures enough anymore they will be lost eventually - just as happened with those glass plates.
Re:Digital isn't always better (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Kodak... (Score:4, Funny)
I guess they're really heavily banking on digital
As someone who lives in Kodak's home town and has worked at the place, I can tell you that's probably not the reason. Much more likely than not, the manager in charge of B&W paper probably ate the lunch of the manager in charge of "digital stuff" and the digital guy convinced the senior managers to eliminate the other's division.
I joke, of course. Kodak's core decisions are usually based on less rational reasons than the one I gave...
Duh (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Duh (Score:5, Insightful)
Photography, The Internet, and I'm sure more!
Re:Duh (Score:2, Funny)
Ewww
Re:Duh (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Duh (Score:3, Insightful)
Who cares .... (Score:5, Informative)
Ilford fine grain semi-matte was always way better than any muddy paper kodak made.
Or Portriga -- Agfa is good too.
Re:Who cares .... (Score:2)
Re:Who cares .... (Score:2)
Re:Who cares .... (Score:2)
Source: http://www.kodak.com/global/en/professional/suppo
Re:Who cares .... (Score:5, Interesting)
As a photographer for 21 years, from 1957 to 1978, where lots of my work came out of a B&W darkroom (and where I did the work with my own little hands), Illford was popular but crap compared to the control one had with Kodak Polycontrast papers (although the Illford filters worked better with Pollycontrast).
I taught photography and darkroom technique as well as working in advertizing, technical and photojournalism photography. Perhaps your pictures were muddy on Kodak paper because you didn't know how to make a good negative. The extra gamma (contrast) of Illford papers was often a crutch for bad photographers.
And the only way to let your photo speak for itself instead of being pseudo art was to use a glossy paper (matte and semi-matte was for the photo clubs) although ferrotyping was silly.
So, now my dream of an exibit of my old work (including the first Woodstock Festival as well as the Vietnam anti-war protests in DC and NYC and Berkeley) in 16x20 and larger is dead?
Re:Who cares .... (Score:2)
Before I posted, I should have checked to make sure those papers are still made. It's been many years now that my enlarger has resided in a closet. The first summer I got into photography, I disolved the skin on my fingertips (no tongs, no gloves) down to the point at which it was painful to touch anything at all for week. Those were the days
Re:Who cares .... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Who cares .... (Score:2)
Re:Who cares .... (Score:2)
Aw crap. For real? I guess I need to buy up a pile of Ultra 100 and RSX 100, and throw in the freezer.
Re:Who cares .... (Score:2)
more info [agfaphoto.com]
Re:Who cares .... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Who cares .... (Score:5, Informative)
Image editing.. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Image editing.. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Image editing.. (Score:3, Informative)
At ISO135, there is no film that can outperform a modern DSLR's sensor. In addition, a DSLR can take many more shots before a change of media is required. In many cases, the film winds up being computer-scanned anyway, so the loss of resolution during the scanning stage drops the "actual" film resolution by a hu
Re:Image editing.. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Image editing.. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Image editing.. (Score:3, Informative)
I'm sure hands-on darkroom work is enjoyable and has a completely different feel to it than digital, and I can understand why many photographers stick with it. But the claim that you can technically do things you can't on a computer is, when it comes to the finished im
Re:Image editing.. (Score:3, Interesting)
Finally, I think there is more uniqueness in 'wet' photography than in digital, adding anther level to the art. It adds to whatever the thing is that makes a piece of art special. Each printed photo is unique, and is slightly different from the n
Re:Image editing.. (Score:5, Insightful)
I have used digital and manual... I have used 1hour processing and I have processed by hand.. I have worked in digital dark rooms and real life dark rooms... all of these tools have a time and a place... their pro's and their cons.. but I still think my best work is done in a dark room...
the dark room is one of the few places that magic still occurs... there is something amazing about placeing a piece of blank paper and shining a light on it.. dipping it in a chemical and seeing an image appear before you...
This is very sad news that they are working on taking this away from us... This is litterally a dying art form... this is the difference between a hand woven tapistry and mass produced articals... this process is still young in so many respects.. photography hasn't even been around for 200 years...
I will agree with other posters that said that there are still other companies.. but how long until they follow suit?
You need a good photo printer, too. (Score:2)
Re:Image editing.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Image editing.. (Score:3, Informative)
Reciprocity failure.
That's when your exposure SHOULD be one thing by mathematics, but it doesn't come out right - so you have to change it to something else that SHOULD be wrong instead. There are tables of that data everywhere.
I'd really like to see some smart chemist or mathematician try to figure that one out!
Re:Image editing.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Image editing.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Go look at someone like Ansel Adam's work in the flesh before you start spouting such nonsense. Digital cannot compete on resolution, contrast or tonal range and for some extremes, like Adam's, probably never will.
Re:Image editing.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Image editing.. (Score:4, Insightful)
It depends on how you're trying to compete. If it's making a shot without a tripod, many relatively cheap digital cameras will beat the 10x8 for overall quality. If it's resolution, well, check out The Gigapixel Project [gigapxl.org].
Digital is pretty darn good these days, and is competing reasonably well in the 35mm world. Within five years it will likely be the better choice for all small and medium format users except those who specifically like to use chemical processes for that sake alone, or due to computer-aversion. As a photographer who does all of his own processing and printing, I may not like this, but I still don't see how black and white is going to do any better than analogue audio.
But I do suspect, in the long run, black and white might actually last longer than C41. Black and white is both much easier for a hobbiest to do and much more flexible. And it's fun. I can't see why anybody would bother with their own C41 processing, though they might possibly still have some interest in printing from colour negatives.
Re:Image editing.. (Score:3, Informative)
You do realize that the Gigapixel project uses a film camera, not a digital camera, right?
Read the FAQ [gigapxl.org] on the site that you linked to. The images are exposed on large format film, and then scanned in with a high resolution scanner.
Re:Image editing.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Digital always win (Score:4, Interesting)
We observe in analog...
the pixels in a digital image shouldn't be aligned.. they should be slightly random.. the frames in video/computer monitors should be a constant sequence of random photons. Digital audio should be Hi Def and slightly fuzzy and data storage should have a level of redundancy.
Until that is met, purists will continue to dislike the tech.
That said, HDR cameras (http://www.cybergrain.com/tech/hdr/ [cybergrain.com]) and HD cameras will revolutionise (even more so) the imaging world.
If I can see a scene, capture it with a single click and later frame it, adjust the colours display it on a high dynamic range monitor, or modify the image so the mountains are as visible as the sun setting behind them, then I say this overcomes a *massive* shortcoming of current and previous cameras.
I don't care for the "art" of technical photography. The real art is in seeing and capturing the images.. the technical side is a clumsy romanticised inconvenience.
Re:Digital always win (Score:3, Insightful)
Mod parent DOWN (Score:4, Insightful)
What BS! The exposure latitude of print film is far higher (more forgiving) than current digital SLRs and point and shoots.
Re:Mod parent DOWN (Score:5, Informative)
Simply set up camera and tripod (this is excellend for landscapes). Expose for the sky, take image (foreground vastly underexposed). Expose for foreground, take image (sky blown out). Take a few more at other exposures, maybe to get the exposure of a flower or the sea or something. Important bit is that the tripod doesn't move
Put them all into PS and use the combine function whose name escapes me and it will stitch them together using the whole range of exposures. For example, the average decent digital SLR can expose around 6 levels of exposure (8 for generic film). Doing this you can easily get a photo with 10+ exposure levels which means everything in the photo is properly exposed.
To do the same with film requires various gradient filters and eitehr blind luck (me) or lots of knowledge (photo pro)
Hmm
Troc.
Re:Mod parent DOWN (Score:4, Informative)
Check your camera manual. It's called AEB in your camera I believe (auto-exposure bracketing). Though I think you only get 3 exposures.
It's called change (Score:3, Funny)
Anyone miss Lithography
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lithograph [wikipedia.org]
Re:It's called change (Score:2)
Re:It's called change (Score:2)
Re:It's called change (Score:2)
Re:It's called change (Score:2)
OGG STILL LIKE CAVE PAINTING!!!
YOU NO TELL OGG WHAT OGG CAN AND CAN NOT DO!!!
OGG BEAT YOU WITH CLUB!
OGG POKE YOU WITH BIG STICK!
NOW YOU HAVE NO EYES AND OGG GO BACK TO CAVE PAINTING ALL DAY!!!!
.
(In other news, the Slashdot's lameness filter is attempting to remove all the humor in my post. Reason: Don't use so many caps. It's like YELLING. Well, that *was* the point of using all caps.)
Who uses kodak B&W paper? (Score:5, Interesting)
When Ilford stops making paper that will be a sad day. Kodak stoping isn't even newsworthy.
Re:Who uses kodak B&W paper? (Score:2)
You speak the truth brother. Kodak always seemed muddy and grey to me -- whites were light grey and blacks were dark grey. But Ilford papers -- those were black, white, and every shade in between. Gorgeous stuff.
Re:Who uses kodak B&W paper? (Score:3, Informative)
Right, and thier film (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Who uses kodak B&W paper? (Score:3, Informative)
That's how it goes.. (Score:2, Insightful)
Haven't done B&W in years (Score:5, Insightful)
This is exactly the reason why they are stopping the product. The poster is probably representative of alot of photographers (and people in general) with a "Hey that's a great thing to start people on this, but I no longer use it myself"
It's economics 101 if you don't make a profit out of something then don't sell it. Yes I know about loss leaders, but this couldn't be described as one of them. I'm sure there will always be a market for black and white photography, but so much is going digital that I think b&w specific film and paper are past their sell by dates
Two Words (Score:2)
Follow the money. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Follow the money. (Score:2)
It's similar to the fact of most graphic design studies requiring students to start with
B&W is hardly dead... (Score:5, Insightful)
Other than in a classroom, you don't find all that many people printing on Kodak B&W papers anyway, and it's been that way for a long time. I'm a phto student/beginning pro photographer and the only time I've printed on Kodak is when it's been given to me. There are other papers that are cheaper and work as well, if not better.
Call it trolling, or flamebait, or whatever, but the biggest thing you have to understand is that the fine art world of photography is not going to die no matter what becomes popular. Hell, there are still people shooting tintype, because they can, and because that's the nature of art. Not what's popular, but what they create and what sells.
Kodak can sit and spin, they aren't the only supplier of B&W paper. It'd be worse if they got rid of their chemicals, which I do use, but also wouldn't be the end of the world. There are many alternatives besides Kodak.
Ranting maybe, but this has been a major topic on many photo boards (it's not new news really), and life goes on.
This is as stupid as arguing that RC paper is better than fiber base, or visa vie. It all depends on what you're doing.
And yes, I do shoot digital too. And large format. I won't give up any of them, they all have teir place, and each have their strong points and weak points.
Re:B&W is hardly dead... (Score:3, Insightful)
One of the long-term effects of that shift will of course be higher prices for all the materials and services.
It's also worth noting that photography's share of the art market (both galleries and auctions) has grown tremendously in the last ten years. A lot of people get into collecting through photography.
Other people make it... (Score:4, Insightful)
What About Schools? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:What About Schools? (Score:2)
It looks better... (Score:2)
I want a black and white digital camera (Score:2)
I think it makes great sense. Current technology could probably give you 32-48 bit dynamic range if all you sampled was black and white and forgot about color. (current color cameras are around 12-16 bit) That would make for incredible quality images and I bet it would sell quite well within the pro and artists market.
Re:I want a black and white digital camera (Score:2)
The depth is controlled by the property of CCD itself. For a very expensive professional version of a CCD, saturation probably occurs about 32,000 electrons per pixel. For a commercial version, it'd be much less than that. To-date, there is no CCD camera (that I know of) which can achieve a dwell depth of 1e9 electron per pixel (or 32 bits).
To beat this, one can read out a CCD very FAST. Or more realistically use something like a CMOS detector that sort of allows you to read out from each one of
Kodak DCS 760M (monochrome) (Score:3, Informative)
Mike
Re:I want a black and white digital camera (Score:2)
Think of it as a separate body that ONLY does black and white but it does it exceptionally well. Better dynamic range and/or better resolution than the equivalent color camera.
Even if you can't get 32 bit dynamic range, you could certainly get much higher quality than you would by faking B/W using a color sensor.
Consolidation is good for the market (Score:3, Interesting)
Ilford makes a lot better paper, especially their Fiber VC glossy. And Agfa makes an incredible Resin Coated (RC) VC glossy (MPC 310), with incredible tonal depth.
I just can't wait to burn through my remaining Kodak polycontrast paper.
Nobody serious about B&W printing will miss Kodak. And if anything it will just mean Ilford and Agfa (who are both struggling) will enjoy a larger market-share. Maybe even Oriental will make an American surge.
For those of you who are curious about what traditional photography has over digital in an age where digital is approaching (and soon exceeding) the resolution of film, it mostly has to do with art, and the feel of the print. For journalism, tourist shots, birthdays, and pr0n, you won't get much for the hassle of chemicals. But there's an organic quality that digitial is missing, which affects artistic expression.
It's kinda like this: a CD of Jazz music played over a solid-state stereo has a completely different feel than a staticy record of Jazz music played over vacuum tubes.
Which is better? Well, it's purely subjective.
-j
--
photos @ http://www.ghostmanonfirst.com/ [ghostmanonfirst.com]
When Black Runs Out... (Score:5, Funny)
The Way to Learn Photography (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The Way to Learn Photography (Score:3, Insightful)
Why not start more basic than that with a pin hole quaker oat box and contact prints? I know i'd be less sad if my niece killed a quaker oat box than my Olympus OM-1.
Re:The Way to Learn Photography (Score:3, Interesting)
Your definition of photography is engaging but I can't subcribe to it. Photography, for me, is the interplay of light and form. There is a need to have a "working knowledge" (differs with each practioner) of light and optics; then there follows a need to come to an understanding of our visual system, with this comes composition, and, composition requires a personal aesthetic, as well as groking the basic grammar. Colour theory has to be acquired with
dozens of choices (Score:2)
(How a self-proclaimed "pro photographer" can be so unfamiliar with the market as to think that Kodak was the only manufacturer of B/W paper left is hard to understand.)
Home made? (Score:2)
No other company does B&W paper? Having done black and white paper development, and having a rather nice experience in the romantic qualities of the safety light while helping a fellow student rock the chemical bath trays to develop her photos, I too am rather sad.
Fond memories.
Still, if it helps, you can always put your SD card into a chemical trough...
Re:Home made? (Score:2)
Anyone Remember that Calvin and Hobbes? (Score:3, Insightful)
Maybe, I'll be able to pull this off easier with my (future) kid
http://www.jasonadamreed.net/images/cartoons/calvi n/ch941106.gif [jasonadamreed.net]
Care to see any of my Black and White Photography [prolix.nu]?
Somewhat sad, but (Score:3, Informative)
But who wants to work in a dark room? You've got the chemistry issue, bulky enlarger issue, and making a room light tight issue, not to speak of working under a safe light. And the printer market is so saturated that you can get an entry level photo printer for $100, an a5 dye sub for $300 and laser for $400. HP has their own photo gray cart for their printers, or you can go with bulk ink and B&W multitone ink.
http://www.lyson.com/quad-black-tone.html [lyson.com]
http://www.inksupply.com/bwpage.cfm [inksupply.com]
http://www.weink.com/ecom/catalog/chromiumbw_-_ma
If I was going to get back into B&W imagery... I'd get my self a $100 Canon i960 inkjet printer if not an Epson, hex black tone ink, and go print happy. Lots of control, buckish/page, Ilford classic pearl paper, and go print happy.
Kodak not the only photo paper maker (Score:2)
Art, tradition and the value of options (Score:3, Interesting)
We've got good consumer home equipment printing options and affordable big commercial labs (filled with automated equipment and button-monkey "technicians") and digital photo everything within easy grasp and price. Digital photography is cheaper all around and has many noteworthy advantages over traditional photography.
Also, even the most weenie digicams one step above the Wal-Mart toys has a B&W and Sepia setting, and the good digicams have tons to offer.
So why fuss or lament ??
Because the collective body of knowledge, experience and artistry in photography is formiddable, and black & white process is an inseperable part of that. Because printing photos (again, where the discontinued paper comes in) is a whole different world from actually taking the photos. Because artists use B&W and it's the most sensible place for newcomers to start learning since it's easier and cheaper than traditional color process.
I'm not sad that Kodak for business reasons decided to quit making B&W paper. That was a business decision from an old company that's confused about it's current and future place in an industry it helped define, and trying to survive. I AM concerned that some will view this as the demise of traditional photograhphy. I don't believe it is.
If traditional small format (8 and 16 mm) motion picture film can survive in a digital imaging world, then traditional photography certainly can.
Photography has a history of invention and evolution, this is just another step.
B&W process will move to the edge, the background. It will step away so that newer processes can rise, but it will not be lost, not for a very long time at least.
While digital process photography will take over the mainstream, B&W process will remain in the hands of the artists and those who wish to learn the craft of photography.
Bottom line, B&W is not dead, one important company's decision to get out of the business is not it's tombstone, and the value of having a significant body of knowledge + traditional options + modern innovation and evolution leading the way makes the craft all the more rich and strong.
Ilford (Score:4, Informative)
When the news came out a couple days ago I thought it was a shame since I used to develop my own B&W film, but quickly realized that even back then I was scanning my films. I almost never printed them so at least in my particular case there is no real loss.
And sure, we got digital, but in over 5 years shooting digital I am still not too happy with my B&W results. It is nice to know that I can grab a manual camera and shoot some Kodak PLUS-X 125 if I feel like it.
I don't know anyone who uses Kodak b/w paper (Score:3, Interesting)
The general shrinking of the market is worrying though - my digicam just doesn't do what I want it to (big enlargements, shallow depth of field, nice grain) but I can see film and processing getting a lot more expensive. I don't think it will ever disappear though; the lab I use have just bought a few millions' worth of new processing equipment and black-and-white was never completely killed off by colour. I don't think there'll be much R&D going into film any more, but Tri-X is decades old and people still like it :-)
Re:DSLR seems like the only way to go (Score:4, Interesting)
And converting a color CCD image to B&W isn't the same, since the pixel filtering is likely involved (if it's a professional digital camera with multi-ccds and a beam splitter, it might be ok).
And obviously you never looked at mid-frame size camera. Digital media is approaching to 35mm camera, but nothing beyond that.
Re:DSLR seems like the only way to go (Score:5, Interesting)
No DSLR uses multiple CDDs (AFAIK). You'll get rather a good B&W by just taking the green channel.
Finally film resolution is always quoted for some tiny contrast ratio (20%? something like that). Digital resolution is at 100% contrast ratio so it can actually look sharper even when the lpi is lower.
If anyone's not seen it, this DSLR vs medium format shootout [luminous-landscape.com] from a few years ago has some interesting stuff in. Has a film person made a rebuttal? I'd be interested to see.
I stand corrected (in one case, at least) & Mo (Score:2)
I believe that digital images looks "shaper" since high frequency foureir component is always present in these CCD detectors. In analog, such forier compnent tends to be smeared out.
Re:DSLR seems like the only way to go (Score:2)
Re:Are records better than CDs? (Score:2)
A record stores an analog waveform of the original sound with much more detail than the quantized digital data on a CD.
But...playing a record with a needle wears down the recording surface and after just a few plays a CD already sounds better. CD's are also much more portable, otherwise durable, and cheaper to make.
You can buy a laser record player in the mind 4-digit price range that will play a record w
Re:Are records better than CDs? (Score:3, Interesting)
They're only better than regular CDs. SA-CDs and DVD-Audio are pretty much at the limit of human hearing's ability [silcom.com].
Re:Ilford is in Chapter11 (Score:2)
Re:It's about time (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Absolute nonsense (Score:2)
Black & White photography is an artform unto itself. It's not like you can "unplug" black & white, and then just just "plug" color in its place and get the same results. Good black and white images are very rich in detail and contrast, and that contrast can lend itself to a much more dramatic image. Color will never match this quality.
Re:It's about time (Score:5, Funny)
Re:It's about time (Score:3, Insightful)
I haven't done b/w photography in years, but I remember there were other brands than Kodak. There still must be.
So if something like this happens, a big player quits because he's not interested in the market anymore, a smaller one quickly steps in.
Don't worry, b/w-photography guys.
Re:It's about time (Score:2)
Re:Take your prefered pixelbased graphic program.. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:This occured to me, too (Score:5, Informative)
I've probably made thousands of black and white prints and I have never printed on kodak black and white paper. Although I do like their color papers when I print color.
I shoot digital as well as traditional film and I do my own printing for color and black and white as well as color and I also send stuff out to digital printers as well. Traditional film printing, especially from larger negatives can be a lot nicer than digital. Especially when it comes to black and white. A nice hand printed black and white print on fiber paper has a certain depth and richness that you can't achive on dye based papers.
There's no need to start making your own emulsions. There are still plenty of other options.
Re:uninformed ./ posts annoy me (Score:4, Informative)
I have experience with both chemical (traditional) photography and digitial photography and imaging. In the latter I've spent quite a bit on display systems on a professional engineering basis and am quite familiar with the issues on that end as well.
Digital photography can be as good as traditional photography, but there is a long road ahead when you find companies that suggest color depth and range are "good enough". This is usually the result of some manager who knows little if anything about the underlying technology but instead doesn't want to throw more money at improving technologies when the end customer, in their opinion, won't notice a difference. Often they are correct in terms of immediate need, but that also effectively kills any future push to improve once the line has been drawn.
To Kodak's credit, when they developed the PCD image format, they included by far the best dynamic range specification than any other digital encoding format. Unfortunately for them (and the rest of us), they kept it propritary, under lock and key with annoying patents and licensing issues incompatable with the GPL (and other nasty problems) so it is seldom if ever used.
The problem with digital imaging is that when you get to extreme ends of the color space (near black or near white, deep red, etc.) is where you most often notice color differences. Particularly near black your eye can percieve a tremendous difference in shades, as your eyes are logrithmic in nature in terms of sensitivity. This is true even with gamma corrected images, but the gamma does help out quite a bit.
Another huge issue that occurs with color (as opposed to monochrome or greyscale images) is that the RGB colorspace (or related CMY) is almost written in stone as the only possible color space, ignoring that people can see more than just three colors. I won't belabor this point, but most people are simply blind on what could be seen with digital photography simply because digital camera and display equipment forces you into seeing through the RGB blinders. It is so common and pervasive that few want to go beyond and try for more color richness. Traditional photography, while still using color filters on its negatives, offers more dynamic range even on colors than what you would see on a computer monitor.
I would also have to agree with the parent poster that people going into photography for the first time (young kids just starting out) are going to get the ultimate garbage digital photographs.
On the other hand, from my experience with digital photography and unlike chemical photography, you can get those kids to take hundreds if not thousands of photographs, and dump the garbage ones that don't have any value. This is a two-edge sword as well because good photographers will try to follow some artistic guidelines in terms of framing the shot, composition of the scene, etc., while somebody taking random shots of everything they look at is going to produce much more garbage shots that should be immediately discarded.
Still, I've handed my kids a digital camera to take on class field trips, and I have been able to get a few very good photos from their experience. And it is neat to get a visual view of life as a 7 year old... something that I have taken for granted at times.
Re:uninformed ./ posts annoy me (Score:3, Interesting)
See: Clarkvision: Film vs. Digital [clarkvision.com]
Another place where digital fails miserably is in long exposure times. Wh