Reflecting on the technical process for my More Memories than Dreams (AKA Fifty Years of Photography) Project the advances in technology are writ large. When I copy my 35mm film negatives they are flawlessly captured, warts and all, as they say.
When I convert the negatives to a positive image should the look of 35 mm prints be faithfully duplicated? Should the images be displayed as they would have looked forty or fifty years ago, or should they be digitally transformed in the same manner as today's RAW files?
I am finding myself using more digital techniques to give the old film negatives a more modern look. Noiseware smoothes out crunchy skies (photoshop’s select sky tool is a technical marvel). Cloning and healing flawlessly remove the scratches, pin holes, and dust spots that doomed many negatives to a life in the negative file. Transform functions correct perspective. The powerful digital editing tools at our command flawlessly update the look of film negatives.
I am conflicted about what I’m doing. Part of me remembers the effort and work to get an image to get close to what I really wanted. Part of me is overjoyed that I can salvage images that were impossible to print forty or fifty years ago and make them be exactly what I wanted. So I am learning to live with the disappointment of leaving the film look behind but am happy to finally achieve the vision forty years after I made an image.
Tomorrow morning is August 1 and that means a new issue of The Lipka Journal will be posted on my website. Remind yourself to surf on over to my website (link at the top of the page) and download a copy of the August Journal. It's easy to recognize. The image above (from a 35 mm negative made in 1976) is on the cover and from one of the image suites in the Journal.