
20 hours ago
|
|
Pencilvania
Lives in
Works as a
Photographer
Has a website at
www.bobundijr.com
Joined on
Jul 12, 2011
|
What I find interesting is that no one is mentioning Kodak's chip manufacturing. Kodak produces and develops most of the leading sensors, the Leica M9's among them. The sales of that division is what will affect current digital photography the most. The beginning of the end of Kodak was not when the company filed for Chapter 11, it was the sale of their sensor division some months ago.
I sympathize with the death of film but it was simply that, a fast decline into a niche. Like Hasselblad, Kodak did not adapt to the ongoing trend in the photographic world in a quick enough time frame. Hasselblad was on the brink of closure for many years after a number of mistakes executed by a foolhardy CEO at the helm. Somehow I doubt Kodak didn't see this coming.
The picture would have been slightly stronger without the excessive blur. The human element is nearly lost in that she comes off more like a doll than a woman. To me it almost feels like more of a Photoshop project than a normal photograph.