By Jim Nickelson–
I’m often asked from friends, family, and even other photographers about why I bother printing my work when the whole world seems to be moving digital. For me, the reason is simple: creating a fine art print is my primary purpose in making photographs.
As is likely becoming obvious, I am a strong proponent and champion of the fine print. If you are a photographer, I think it is essential to eventually print your work.
You can do it yourself or have someone else do it, you can create a fine digital print or something equally and differently wondrous like a silver gelatin or platinum print, and you can print at whatever size that makes you happy.
The exercise of selecting a photograph for print, performing any necessary preparation, and seeing how it actually looks once off the screen can be extremely valuable.
While I love how the Internet has made it possible to disseminate images electronically, I do believe that there is something special about an actual physical print. Perhaps it is the presence of a fine print as an object.
Perhaps it is the implication that you care enough about the photograph to actually create a physical print, or perhaps it is the fact that so many photographs just look different (some better, some worse) on paper rather than on a backlit LCD monitor or iPad screen. Whatever the reason, I find that nothing in the world of photography compares with seeing a wonderful print of a photograph.
Making a print of your photograph, and putting care into doing so, is putting a stake in the sand for your artwork, a way of saying “this is important” and “this is what I’m trying to say.”
Printing your work has numerous advantages over a digital-only existence for your photographs, such as:
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
Jim Nickelson is a photographer, master printer and educator whose work resides in museum, public, corporate, and private collections across the United States and Canada. This excerpt from his new book “Fine Art Inkjet Printing, The Craft and Art of the Fine Digital Print” © 2017, has been reprinted by permission of the publisher, Rocky Nook, Inc. It is currently available from Amazon (about $30,00) and from the publisher as well as other booksellers. If purchasing from Rocky Nook use the code FINE40 for a 40% discount for Red River Paper Blog readers. The book’s Table of Contents and first three chapters are displayed at the Amazon site.
VISIT JIM’ NIKELSON’S WEBSITE HERE
Learn about Red River Paper’s line of Fine Art Printing Papers used by some of the world’s finest photographers and master printers.
Original Publication Date: October 30, 2017
Article Last updated: October 30, 2017
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