Finished Art Isn’t a Trend — It’s a Tradition
My understanding of photography was shaped through formal education at the Rochester Institute of Technology, long before digital files existed. It began with film, technical training, and hours spent in both color and black-and-white darkrooms—where every decision mattered, and nothing was finished until it was printed. The photograph didn’t truly exist until it became a physical piece, carefully crafted and complete.
That foundation still informs the way I work today. Finishing an image has always been part of the process, not an optional add-on. Color, tone, contrast, and presentation are intentional choices that define the final artwork and give a photograph its voice. This is where craft lives—quietly, behind the scenes.
At Imaging USA, this commitment to finished art is unmistakable. Professional labs line the trade show floor, displaying large-scale framed family portraits created by photographers who care deeply about the final result. I’ve worked with my professional lab, H&H Color Lab, since 2004, and that long-standing partnership reflects a shared belief in quality, consistency, and craftsmanship.
There’s a common misconception that printing is rare or outdated. In reality, finished artwork continues to thrive among photographers who understand that a photograph’s purpose isn’t just to be seen—it’s to be lived with. Finished art has never gone away. It has simply remained in the hands of those committed to doing the work all the way through.