One thing I found really fascinating in the  video, Ansel often boosted the 
contrast way up. Especially on his most  well-known photos. If he had done 
that in color it would have been immediately  noticeable.

In other words, he was a Photoshopper well before there was a  Photoshop.

So, yes, Rob he probably would have loved  digital.

Marnie aka Doe :-)   

In a message dated  4/16/2013 12:24:29 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time, 
pixelsmi...@gmail.com  writes:
There's a lot of converstation going on between your ears, John,  that
didn't come out of my mouth. I shoot color. If I were  disparaging
anyone I would have to include myself as one who needed to  be
disparaged. But that's not what I'm doing. Occasionally I find an
image  that I think would look better in B&W and I'm generally pleased
with the  results and often prefer it to the color version.

My point was that Ansel  Adam's B&W imagery made him an icon.  He chose
the same subject  matter for his color work. Is there really anyone
among us who look at those  color images of his and think they are head
and shoulders above anything you  have seen elsewhere? Or that he would
have become an icon if he had only his  color work to show?

There is a reason that the colorizing of black and  white films bothers
people. A lot of people. It is because there is a  different aesthetic
at work in black and white. Ansel himself refers to it as  an
interpretation of reality (whereas color photography is mostly  just
reality). Sometimes  reality is impressive enough - one reason  that
cliches like sunrises/sunsets are so enjoyable to us. Few would  claim
that a sunset in black & white is going to have more impact than  the
color version.

It has nothing to do with being inferior. Take any  of those color
images of Ansel Adams and convert it to B&W (applying  Adam's Zone
System for best dynamic range) and ask 100 people which image has  more
gravitas and I guarantee you that the majority of those who  understand
the meaning of the word will choose the B&W. That's all I'm  saying,
and you are free to disagree or to get any degree of frostburn  they
would like by extrapolating from my comments, rather than just  taking
them at face value.

On Tue, Apr 16, 2013 at 2:06 PM, John  Francis <jo...@panix.com> wrote:
>
> I disagree,  too.
>
> But what really frosts me about the statement is the  implicit
> arrogance that assumes anyone who generally prefers colour  to
> B&W images is just plain wrong, and an inferior being  incapable
> of appreciating the true value of the work.
>
> If  you like B&W images, fine. But it should be possible for
> you to  enjoy them without disparaging those who don't.
>
>
>
>  On Tue, Apr 16, 2013 at 02:54:45PM -0400, Bruce Walker wrote:
>> Two  words: Afghan Girl.
>>
>> IOW, I disagree.  :-)
>>
>> On Tue, Apr 16, 2013 at 2:07 PM, Darren Addy  <pixelsmi...@gmail.com> 
wrote:
>> > Ansel's color images are  nice enough but they illustrate, in a way
>> > that few other things  can, how color images can never have the
>> > gravitas of a good  B&W image.
>> >
>> > On Tue, Apr 16, 2013 at 10:44  AM, Zos Xavius <zosxav...@gmail.com> 
wrote:
>> >>  http://www.time.com/time/photogallery/0,29307,1932762,00.html
>>  >>
>> >> worth a look!
>> >>
>>  >> On Tue, Apr 16, 2013 at 11:41 AM, George Sinos <gsi...@gmail.com>  
wrote:
>> >>> A few years ago there was an exhibit of various  photographers work 
at
>> >>> the local museum.  Several  8x10 color transparencies were on display
>> >>> (Kodachrome,  if I remember correctly.)  They were on a large light
>>  >>> table, back lit, of course.
>> >>>
>>  >>>  I was surprised to see that were Adam's work.   gs
>> >>> George Sinos
>> >>>  --------------------
>> >>> www.GeorgesPhotos.net
>>  >>> www.GeorgeSinos.com
>> >>>
>>  >>>
>> >>> On Tue, Apr 16, 2013 at 10:37 AM,   <eactiv...@aol.com> wrote:
>> >>>> I had the same  thought. But since he preferred  B&W, he probably 
would  have
>> >>>> found the first digital cameras  disappointing  for B&W. Although 
he did
>> >>>>  shoot some in color too.
>> >>>>
>>  >>>> Marnie aka  Doe    I really got a lot ouf  of the interview.
>> >>>>
>> >>>> In  a  message dated 4/15/2013 4:38:00 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time,
>>  >>>> distudio.p...@gmail.com writes:
>> >>>> He  could see the potential in digital image  capture even at that  
early
>> >>>> stage, one wonders what amazing work he could  have  produced with 
the
>> >>>> new  medium.
>> >>>>
>> >>>> --
>>  >>>> Rob Studdert (Digital  Image  Studio)
>>  >>>> Tel: +61-418-166-870 UTC +10 Hours
>> >>>>  Gmail, eBay, Skype, Twitter,  Facebook, Picasa: distudio
>>  >>>>
>> >>>>
>> >>>>  --
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>> >  --
>> > "Photography is a Bastard left by Science on the Doorstep of  Art" -
>> > Peter Galassi
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