Then came color, and more importantly, 'ease of color processing' everywhere and anywhere - just drop the film and pick-up it up later.
This became so easy that family-members got 'kind of hooked up' to color and me - the earlier amateur and now the family-man had to kind of do color. Day-to-day hectic things don't really give time to do those home-darkroom thing anymore - I would love to do it, though.
So, my question to all who replied on 'why do you use b&w',
HOW MANY OF YOU DO YOUR OWN PROCESSING ? AND IF YOU ARE NOT PROFESSIONAL, WHAT KIND OF SET-UP YOU HAVE ?
TIA
anand
From: "John Whicker" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Subject: Re: Why do you use b&w? Date: Tue, 14 Jan 2003 21:23:34 -0000Mark D. wrote: > > Cause sometimes, color gets in the way. Good answer! You don't need colour to define shape, form amd texture. John
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