B&W photography: What happened to grain?

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Some features previously available only in post-processing software are now being incorporated on dSLRs, e.g. HDR. What about B&W? Some of us boarded dSLRs from film. Shooting mostly B&W I find there's a huge difference between film B&W and digital "Monochrome" (i.e. defined as conversion from digital RGB color to mono) as regards grain. Seems technology moved forward leaving grain and all associated artistic expression behind. You can't get it anymore on dSLR probably because in sensor technology the equivalent to grain is Noise, i.e. unwanted.

So, do we end up paying 10,000 dollar 1Ds3's and now 1DX's to be unable to take a B&W picture a $50 discontinued Canon AV1 can? This is where Nik catches up. On Silver Efex they emulate some popular film types, e.g. Tri-X 400, T-Max Pro 100, Ilford Pan F 50, Fuji Neopan 1600, etc. where by some algorithm they add up to 500 dots on each pixel to emulate grain as best possible.

I'm not associated to Nik in any way but if Canon sensors (or N@kon or whatever for that purpose) inherently killed grain then please incorporate emulation in all dSLR just like HDR or give us Silver Efex bundled with the Canon utilities CD.

I posted a poll for this right next to see. Choices: 1. Film-type emulation menu to be incorporated on the body, 2. Silver Efex (or equivalent) bundled on utilities CD or 3. Do nothing, don't care for B&W grain anyway (or other reason).
 
Why not just shoot film and save yourself some of the conversion problems. Many Canon film bodies barely get any bids on eBay and go for next to nothing. Film is only a few dollars a roll. Developing it yourself only costs a couple of dollars per roll and you can get most of the work done in 15 - 20 minutes (plus you can develop multiple rolls at one time - so the time per roll becomes inconsequential).

Sure, the cost is a factor. But think of it as an additional futureproof archival / storage solution.

You're then left with a negative which you can then easily scan for digital workflow (and has the "look" you are seeking) and which you can also print using traditional methods.
 
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Good riddance! Grain as "artistic expression"? No thank you. There is a reason I never enlarged my Tri-X 8x10 negatives beyond 16x20. I'll leave the grain to the 110 cartridge shooters.
 
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I've got a Canon 1N RS that I shoot occasionally to get the great effect of high ASA for the grainy feel. The only downsides of this is that I don't have a lab where I can develop my own slides, nor do I have a room to print them.
 
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Eric said:
Good riddance! Grain as "artistic expression"? No thank you. There is a reason I never enlarged my Tri-X 8x10 negatives beyond 16x20. I'll leave the grain to the 110 cartridge shooters.
I like a bit of grain in photos—sometimes. The thing is, why limit yourself at the outset? In post production if I see a photo that is suited to a certain look, I create that look, but it's always best to start with as clean a photo as possible. What happens if you change your mind? Shooting RAW and shooting clean leave you the most flexibility and while doing something "old school" has its quaint charm, it's the same kind of quaint charm you get out of driving a 1938 Ford Convertible. It's cool. It's interesting. It evokes a certain kind of nostalgia. But really now, would you want to rely upon it for your day to day travel and your drive across country?
 
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I like to see grain in some monochrome images, but the operative word is some. To add it automatically to every image is the wrong way to my thinking.

I like playing with my images in Photoshop, and it allows me to add a fairly realistic grain effect when I feel it is called for.

So no, I'm another who would not want an "in-camera" system. In fact I never shoot monochrome in camera anyway, always colour and decide later what a particular scene requires.
 
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I'd say good riddance with film, color and B&W, but grain on B&W is a different story. It gives a very much wanted dramatic feel. Those not in the know check out the works of say Anton Corbijn. Sure you can post-process but grain is not contrast, sharpness or white balance, it's like saying try post-process bokeh. Best thing presently available is to emulate just as Silver Efex Pro.

So what I'm saying is if B&W turned to Mono then give us the compensation tool, on-board or on CD. Or maybe next time accept we all have fixed f/5.6 lenses marketed and just try to post-process bokeh.
 
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Grain has it's place, as opposed to noise.
I prefer to add grain to a clean image though, like a black and white landscape. It texturises clouds and can enhance the overall feel of an image.

I'm sure a lot of pros in the times of film would of loved their images to be grain free though.

i.e. http://www.freestylephoto.biz/6031330-Kodak-Ektar-100-iso-35mm-x-36-exposure-film
 
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GND said:
Some features previously available only in post-processing software are now being incorporated on dSLRs, e.g. HDR. What about B&W? Some of us boarded dSLRs from film. Shooting mostly B&W I find there's a huge difference between film B&W and digital "Monochrome" (i.e. defined as conversion from digital RGB color to mono) as regards grain. Seems technology moved forward leaving grain and all associated artistic expression behind. You can't get it anymore on dSLR probably because in sensor technology the equivalent to grain is Noise, i.e. unwanted.

So, do we end up paying 10,000 dollar 1Ds3's and now 1DX's to be unable to take a B&W picture a $50 discontinued Canon AV1 can? This is where Nik catches up. On Silver Efex they emulate some popular film types, e.g. Tri-X 400, T-Max Pro 100, Ilford Pan F 50, Fuji Neopan 1600, etc. where by some algorithm they add up to 500 dots on each pixel to emulate grain as best possible.

I'm not associated to Nik in any way but if Canon sensors (or N@kon or whatever for that purpose) inherently killed grain then please incorporate emulation in all dSLR just like HDR or give us Silver Efex bundled with the Canon utilities CD.

I posted a poll for this right next to see. Choices: 1. Film-type emulation menu to be incorporated on the body, 2. Silver Efex (or equivalent) bundled on utilities CD or 3. Do nothing, don't care for B&W grain anyway (or other reason).


Good point. Digital is great and there are now things possible at little or no cost that were unthinkable before. That's great. Other things are lost along the way. I haven't tried the Nik Software yet. I'm certain is does a great job.

But then there is still printing. And that's where traditional prints from film still are still ahead by over a hundred years. And that's where I see the biggest opportunity in advancing digital photography. In the meantime it's going to be a mute point if Canon puts out 21 MP cameras, 18 MP cameras or 10 MP cameras. It appears to be lost in translation anyway as far as I can see.
 
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I've always used the policy that I take all my pictures RAW with no in camera 'fiddling'. Post processing lets you add any effect you like without the worry of ruining a perfectly good shot with the wrong effect. Allows a much more subtle effect and multiple filters without a 'one size fits all' approach :)
 
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Hillsilly said:
Why not just shoot film and save yourself some of the conversion problems. Many Canon film bodies barely get any bids on eBay and go for next to nothing. Film is only a few dollars a roll. Developing it yourself only costs a couple of dollars per roll and you can get most of the work done in 15 - 20 minutes (plus you can develop multiple rolls at one time - so the time per roll becomes inconsequential).

Sure, the cost is a factor. But think of it as an additional futureproof archival / storage solution.

You're then left with a negative which you can then easily scan for digital workflow (and has the "look" you are seeking) and which you can also print using traditional methods.

I do shoot film. Mostly B&W film. But sometimes digital is necessary for convenience such as when shooting weddings.
 
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This discussion reminds me of a lot of guitar players.
First you had valve-based guitar amps, which overloaded nicely and made 'classic' distortion (think Led Zep and Pink Floyd).
Then you got transistor-based amps, which sounded a lot crunchier, had a good sound in certain cases (like metal), but a lot prefered the 'valve-sound'.
Now you get the digital sound processing, and a lot of R&D goes into what's called 'COSM', basically digital-sound-processing trying to emulate the sound of valves using a computer.
But why don't they just use a valve-amp? Firstly, they cost a lot more than a mass-produced effects pedal. And then you've only got one amp with one sound of distortion. Does it sound as good? Maybe, maybe not, depends on the use-scenario, but it's getting close to indistinguishable. When you don't have the distortion on, transistors sound cleaner than valves, sure, but that's not the point, the distortion is the point.

So B+W film? Yes, you can buy even a 1V on ebay for less than a new 550D (and every other body is even cheaper again). But then you're stuck with one type of grain (per film roll) until you finish the roll or buy another body (or get an MF body or Rollei 3003 and swap film backs).
Digital is certainly the easier and cheaper route. Does adding it in post 'look' as good as film? Maybe, maybe not, it does in some cases, but in others it might just look cheesy. Definitely, digital is 'cleaner' for photos that are meant to be clean, but that's not the point.
If I were a wedding photog, i'd be carrying an extra body with some 4-800iso b+w film, if I saw a shot that deserved it then i'd whip out the film body, otherwise shoot digital. If I find in post that there's a shot that really needed b+w grain, i could add it in post. Maybe it wouldn't look as good as if it had been natively film, but it's better than a shot that may just look bad in colour. (My cousin got married in 1998, in the film days, she's got some great b+w and colour wedding photos blown up to 20" or so, the photog would have had at least 3 bodies, colour roll, b+w roll, spare/film-changing body, or more).

As to when to add, shoot raw and do it on your computer in PP. DPP converts to monochrome and emulates colour-filters, that's good enough for me and a lot of others. For adding an actual grain look, that's what Photoshop and GIMP filters (or other programs) are for.
 
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