Long before plunging into digital photography, one very good photographer with years of excellent work explained to me his reason to drop film and buy a Nikon D200 this way: "No grain." I was still thinking about the amazing sharpness of my Leicas and some of my Nikons (especially the AF ED 80-200 I have), and decided that if grain was a problem, sharpness was overrated.
Above are some old images, made with my Nikon F5 and my AF-S 24-120 VR on Kodak tungsten film ISO 160, in December 2007, in Chicago, in the midst of a hellish winter. These images show (gasp!) grain. In fact, the grain here is just gorgeous... and makes me wonder about the reasons, the legitimate reasons why I fell in love with sharpness.
And now, one that stands out, at least to me:In this photograph of the Dearborn Bridge in Chicago, there was a lot of grain in the lower right corner before I tinkered with it. While I was initially annoyed about it, suddently I realized that this precise aspect drew me to certain images: grain, like the painter's strokes, is not a problem here, not something to eschew, but the artist's "signature", the proof that we're not looking at nature itself, but at something that represents a particular subjectivity.
Pretty nice, huh? Grain, as opposed to what others term "coldness" or "impure perfection", separates two different media. Digital gives us a perfect image, but film is still a personal choice. Since this film has a slow ISO (just 160), what would the photos be like with, say, a typical B&W ISO 400? Grain galore... Does it mean "imperfection" or is it just an interpretive view?
What do you think now?
1 comment:
Hey that's a really lovely night shot of Chicago. My good mate Abdul, says he's like to go there an take a few shots... but he fears immigration control wont let him through.
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