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Sunday, June 12, 2011

Union City Soccer 06-12-11

Great weather brings great soccer action!

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Film is not DEAD...

Basketball Ft. Worth YMCA, Ft. Worth Texas 1994City Council Candidates, Cathedral City, CA 09-24-98Shooting, Flowing Wells, CA 10-14-98Overturned Fire Truck, Bakersfield, CA 10-30-00Tina Turner, Centennial Garden, Bakersfield, CA 12-03-00Brandy Glasses
Pumas UNAM v. Orange County Waves, Bakersfield, CA 07-27-00Frisbee, Bakersfield, CA 07-27-00Ridgeview High Commencement, Bakersfield, CA 06-07-00Los Angeles Avengers v. Arizona Rattlers 04-05-01Bakersfield College v. Oxnard College 03-03-00Missed putt PGA Q-School, PGA West Course, La Quinta, CA 1999
Jumpers, Astoria Park Pool, Queens, NY Summer 1991College of the Desert Graduation, Palm Desert, CA, May 1999Yosemite Divison Baseball Championship Game 05-25-00Homicide in Bakersfield, CA 08-07-00Rocket launch over Mt. San Jacinto Fall 1999Swimmer at the YMCA pool, Reseda, CA 1994
SJSU v. San Jose Blackhawks 1992Shopping Carts, San Jose, CA 1990Marcio, San Jose, CA 1993Bonnie Raitt, San Francisco, CA 1990Trapped motorist, Bakersfield, CA 04-20-00Girl in Brick Alley, San Jose, CA 1992
Film, a set on Flickr.
...But it definitely has one foot in the grave. According to this story by the Associated Press, U.S. sales have dropped from nearly one billion rolls of film annually at the turn of the 21st Century to approximately 20 million per year.

With it's ease of use and instant playback capabilities, it's easy to see why the general public has made the switch to digital.  However, speaking with other professionals, it also seems that the average person perceives digital as having the ability to produce higher quality images.  It's also possible that the public has the belief that from an artistic perspective, images produced with digital cameras are "better" and photographers that own more technically advanced cameras have superior skills.

Photography has never been about the equipment people use.  It's about how they use this equipment to produce compelling images.  The medium does not define the impact of a picture or the skill of the photographer.

Although circumstances may occasionally necessitate the use of a particular medium, it's up to each and every photographer to determine what will work best for them, as their number one responsibility is to produce the most compelling images possible. 

Happy shooting!