...and something you don't have to do magic tricks with to get a basic image.
This sums it up for me too and it's what Damion and I were trying to explore in the last video podcast. Could we just load the film in a camera and take a photo without first having to do some research? The answer was, "not quite".
One of the things that I LOVE about film photography over digital is just how forgiving almost all aspects of the process are (whether you're shooting, slide, C41, b/w neg, instant...whatever). The reason I go on about this 'ballpark' nonsense is as a way of trying to demystify a lot of the gear-head tech-babble that's grown up around photography. You see, in a lot of cases you really
can just point and shoot and you'll get a decent result. I'm looking forward to the day that you can do that with TIP products. I think we're getting close, but we ain't there yet.
Also, I think we need to be careful about this idea of perfection being a bad thing. I've said it before; I'm happy for my photos to look crappy. In fact much of the time I'm disappointed if they turn out too well, but I don't want to pay through the nose for crapiness or to test someone's product when it should just work already. 'Crappy' is great for DIY, out of date, cheapo, experimental or free materials. However, when I'm paying top dollar, I epxect it to work. TIP film is not cheap. I wouldn't buy a Leica and be chuffed if the results weren't perfect, but if I bought an old Zorki on evilBay I'd embrace the imperfections.