Photodigigraphs is too long of a word.  How about photographs.

Jim A.

> From: "Bill Owens" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Date: Thu, 19 Jun 2003 06:29:19 -0400
> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: Re: digigraphers
> Resent-From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Resent-Date: Thu, 19 Jun 2003 17:12:41 -0400
> 
> photodigigraphs?
> 
> Bill
> 
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sent: Thursday, June 19, 2003 5:41 AM
> Subject: Re: digigraphers
> 
> 
>> But what about the images captured by silicon chips but are printed on
> photographic paper?
>> 
>> I know a lab that provides such prints.
>> 
>> DagT
>> 
>> 
>>> Fra: "Bob Rapp" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>>> 
>>> I like that Cotty!!! You have widened the gap that was preniously only
>>> nanometer apart (according to some)!
>>> 
>>> Well done, Cotty, well done!
>>> 
>>> Bob Rapp
>>> ----- Original Message -----
>>> From: "Cotty" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>>> To: "Pentax List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>>> Sent: Thursday, June 19, 2003 7:16 PM
>>> Subject: Re: Agfa Competition
>>> 
>>> 
>>>>> Hmmm.... Can any digital print be called a "Photograph"? Perhaps a
>>> "Digital
>>>>> Image" would be more appropriate!
>>>> 
>>>> Oxford Pocket says:
>>>> 
>>>> Photograph:
>>>> Picture taken by means of a chemical action of light on sensitive
> film.
>>>> 
>>>> With this as a baseline, it would be ultimately wrong to call an
> inkjet
>>>> print from a digital camera image a 'photograph' because the original
> was
>>>> not  'taken by means of a chemical action of light on sensitive film'.
>>>> 
>>>> UNLESS we are describing the light-sensitive digital sensor as a
> 'film'
>>>> (EG '... there was a thin film of oil covering her golden writhing
>>>> body...') viz:  '...the camera had an electronic device inside it that
>>>> had a film of material on it capable of retaining an image captured
>>>> through the lens...'
>>>> 
>>>> HOWEVER if we ignore this as spiltting hairs and stick with the Oxford
>>>> definition, and a digital image on an inkjet print therefore cannot be
>>>> called a 'photograph', then what of an inkjet print made from a scan
> of a
>>>> 35mm negative - still inkjet but now called a photograph?
>>>> 
>>>> IF THIS argument is followed to the letter, then 'photograph' clearly
> is
>>>> the wrong name. I suggest something like 'digigraph' to demark the
>>>> origination of the image - (..I took this photograph on my MX, and
> this
>>>> digigraph on my D60, nyuk nyuk nyuk...)
>>>> 
>>>> THIS HABIT of capitalising the first two words of each sentence is now
>>>> tiresome and I will stop.
>>>> 
>>>> Cheers,
>>>> Cotty
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> ___/\__
>>>> ||   (O)   |      People, Places, Pastiche
>>>> ||=====|      www.macads.co.uk/snaps
>>>> _____________________________
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>>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
>> 
>> 
> 
> 

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