I was actually trying to decide if there is actually any difference in monochrome shot on film or digital. And of course with Photoshop and a little time, the tones can be refined to produce the most stunning results in either traditional or digital medium.
But why shoot monochrome when you can shoot in colour anyway? I think it is of course subjective, and very personal, but whilst colour may bring immediacey, monochrome holds time, a moment, with more clarity. Perhaps, with the colour taken away, the image before us requires us to add to the picture, we have to look at the tones, the structure of the content, and fill in the information we would normally not have to think about. We have to interact more, add a little of our own creativity to the image, in deciding the colour of an object, the light or if the crushed blacks are infact deep red or green.
Colour, of course, is a true reflection of the world about us. And again with photoshop we can create a new magic in colour as intreaging as monochrome.
In colour or monochrome, we record a moment in time. With digital the results are immediate, but so is the opportunity to delete that moment. So will the demise of film and the rise of digital actually truely reflect our time, or will future generations just look back on a very selective, polished age?
And colour of course has instant reward, like our consumer society, or is it just because monochrome is associated with 'classic' images.
Either way, may both continue, the choice between colour and monochrome.

