Simonpg,
I don't understand, how is digital capture, or even digital post-processing taking away any of "the process of seeing and recording images"?
Photography hasn't changed: you still have to consider the same limited set of basic 'technical' parameters, still have to use your head to find/see/create images, etc.
What has changed is that there is less time spent inhaling fumes in dank and dark places. No great loss, i think.
Using different tools brings a different set of things to annoy us. Error messages instead of edge fogging, etc.
But the difference in ease of use between 'old-fashioned' and digital post-processing posibilities/tools alone makes it worthwhile.
(I still do not use direct digital capture myself. Just scanning films. Which in itself is a real pain in some posterior parts, as it takes forever.)
Now "fine tuning" vs "making my images something they were not"...
What takes precedence, do you think, the things your imagination tells you you should do to the 'raw material', or the 'raw material' itself? Should diamonds be left the way they came from deep below, or...?
But yes, if the 'raw material' is meant to provide a representation of something, any processing that would make it less representative obviously is a bad thing.
On the other hand, the added posibilities new tools offer could and should be used to 'free' our 'creative imagination'. Nothing wrong with that. On the contrary: it would be extremely silly if we want to do something, can do the very thing, but do not because someone says these new fangled devices are the work of the devil.
It's a decision we make. The tools are not to blame if we do the wrong thing. So i can't see why i should not like "all that digi stuff".
Hugely off-topic again. Sorry!
The 'ancient' Hasselblad stuff is indeed a joy to both have and use. To really appreciate it, i think you have to think back and imagine how that little part of our world called 'photography' was before these things appeared.
It's hard to do that, i feel, since we are all so used to the new things these cameras offered.
It's hard to do too while using these 'ancient' things, because there is very little difference to how modern Hasselblads 'work'.
I don't understand, how is digital capture, or even digital post-processing taking away any of "the process of seeing and recording images"?
Photography hasn't changed: you still have to consider the same limited set of basic 'technical' parameters, still have to use your head to find/see/create images, etc.
What has changed is that there is less time spent inhaling fumes in dank and dark places. No great loss, i think.
Using different tools brings a different set of things to annoy us. Error messages instead of edge fogging, etc.
But the difference in ease of use between 'old-fashioned' and digital post-processing posibilities/tools alone makes it worthwhile.
(I still do not use direct digital capture myself. Just scanning films. Which in itself is a real pain in some posterior parts, as it takes forever.)
Now "fine tuning" vs "making my images something they were not"...
What takes precedence, do you think, the things your imagination tells you you should do to the 'raw material', or the 'raw material' itself? Should diamonds be left the way they came from deep below, or...?

But yes, if the 'raw material' is meant to provide a representation of something, any processing that would make it less representative obviously is a bad thing.
On the other hand, the added posibilities new tools offer could and should be used to 'free' our 'creative imagination'. Nothing wrong with that. On the contrary: it would be extremely silly if we want to do something, can do the very thing, but do not because someone says these new fangled devices are the work of the devil.
It's a decision we make. The tools are not to blame if we do the wrong thing. So i can't see why i should not like "all that digi stuff".
Hugely off-topic again. Sorry!
The 'ancient' Hasselblad stuff is indeed a joy to both have and use. To really appreciate it, i think you have to think back and imagine how that little part of our world called 'photography' was before these things appeared.
It's hard to do that, i feel, since we are all so used to the new things these cameras offered.
It's hard to do too while using these 'ancient' things, because there is very little difference to how modern Hasselblads 'work'.