Which is the superior medium, color or black and white, film or digital are subjective questions, without definitive answers. What works in one situation may fail miserably in another. Sporting events are one example of a situation when color is superior. Landscapes and portraiture can go either way. A black and white landscape can save a picture from being overwhelmed by excessive color. Everything comes down to application and execution. Black and white allows the photographer as artist to reveal a world invisible to the naked eye. In black and white, abstract shapes, contrast, and recurring patterns have a psychological impact and dignity often unrealized in color. When the beauty of a common place item comes through in a photograph, the photograph has become art. Photography began as black and white, or more specifically monochrome. Not all early images were truly black and white. Many had a brownish tint (sepia), and others even had hints of blue when the cyanotype process was employed. The fist photographs to be considered art were all black and white. Achieving a timeless look has much to do with why many masters of photography continue to work in this medium. From a purely technical standpoint, black and white prints simply last longer. Even the very best color prints degrade over time. Digital photography has taken the black and white photography to unprecedented heights. Today’s high end digital camera’s and powerful computer software, give the modern photographic artist control the masters of old never dreamed of.
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