#3 option
Printable View
#3 option
Take a look at the current work of Tillman Crane. Noted for using 12x20 for a long time he is now completely digital for image capture. Then makes a negative so he can do Pt/Pd contact prints. Have seen some 30 inch Pt/Pd prints from his Fuji cameras and they are excellent.
He recently finished the Tenth Year of his Workshop in North Dakota and you see a number of his images from there. Early years were film and he has moved to Digital/hybrid with good success.
Always #3. Trays for sheet film. Tanks for roll film. Prints on fiber-based paper. Some contact printing on Azo with an overhead bulb, otherwise a Durst 138 w colorhead and a Beseler 45MXT with a Zone VI VC head.
No. 3 for me.
#3 ... One at a time, in trays and a bit of music.
Large format is all analog for me.
#3 with scans of the print for web display. I imagine this poll would be shaped differently if you took it at Photrio or even Rangefinder forums. Other photo forums they would ask what is film?
I'm embarrassed. I'm the only one of 97 people (so far) who sends his film out to develop and print/displays digitally. Only one other sends it to a lab but prints chemically.
I process my own black and white film because it's dead simple, I don't have to schlep it to a lab and back and it's cheaper. Also, I'm impatient and this way I get to see my results right away.
I expect that a significant majority of people are scanning and processing negatives in Photoshop/Capture One.
#3
Truth be known, I’ve been lazy for a while and haven’t used my darkroom like I used to. I’m going to spend more time with darkroom work now that winter is drawing near.