Dallas Labs Diversify

It’s nothing new to report how interesting the photographic lab scene has become in the last ten years.

We’ve gone from mom-and-pop print shops and Wal Mart labs, to online ordering and a plethora of choices of online labs and products offered by different labs. Basically, labs can and will print anything on anything nowadays.

So today, while working as a “conservator” for the Rafaelli Collection, I am helping the owner of the estate find outlets for printing retail prints for sale directly to the public. Demand is high, and there are a lot of projects attached to Ron Raffaelli’s fantastic collection of rock-and-roll imagery from the golden era of rock – the late 1960’s.

Today’s photo lab visit is in Dallas – Full Color east of Downtown Dallas, to see what they offer and what they can do for the Collection.

On a parallel track, I am also looking for a new personal archival printer, and as usual the Epson line of inkjet printers is still the printer’s printer. I’ve been using Epson since they emerged as the leader in photographic printing for artists, and they have been through some rocky patches over the years, but still have an outstanding product.

Of course, knowledge on HOW TO PRINT is as critical as what printer to use and what to print particular images on (what paper). The right printer profile, the right settings on the printer software interface, and the right settings in Adobe Photoshop — If you get it all correct — can produce fantastic results.

Irons in the FIRE

Hey fans of photography! I saw a bumper sticker today. It said: Film is not dead. Really? I must have missed the notice. Film is IS dead. To say FILM IS NOT DEAD, is a lot like saying, “anything my parents believe is wrong.” Grow the fuck up.

Go ahead and make your living as a so called “artist, ” that shoots film. Get back to me when you’re living on the streets of Denton under an overpass, and I will come out and photograph you with my digital camera. Feel Free To Think.

Yes, film has a different, and barely distinct, set of technical values – late in the second decade of the 21st. Century. But will the typical viewer be able to distinguish between what I do digitally (assuming we print), and what you do on film? Well, they may notice you are showing your work on the inside of the open trunk of your ’63 Chevy, but otherwise? Hell no.

We live in a world where the still image decision makers have no clue, no education and no real interest in quality – that is at least the decision makers I know best. The downward spiral of mediocrity continues at an increasing pace …

For example. How many two year projects have you seen from the streets of little old Denton, Texas … Three year, five year? None. I am about five couches away from printing my book and accompanying images, “Couch Art; Denton Street Photography Volume I,” in 2020. Will there be copycats? Will the minions of maven-hood from local University of North Texas or Texas Women’s University’s photography perk up? Oh, hell no. We live in the era of, “If I didn’t do it, it didn’t happen,” and that is that. Thankfully, I don’t have to pander to the newly, and perpetually “educated.”

No, I have to pander to a completely different set of standards and principles. More about that later though …

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