xayraa33
rangefinder user and fancier
I was led to believe that film would go away and disappear once digital cameras got to be very good but luckily for us that like and use film this was not the case.
All these film posts have left me feeling nostalgic. Here are a couple things that I enjoyed about film back when I was toting around a couple of Canon F1 bodies with various lenses and when digital photography was a rumor on the distant horizon.
I loved to go shopping for film. In the late ‘80s - early ‘90s my photo buddy and I would take the train to Yodobashi Camera in Shinjuku. Back then the film section was massive. The refrigerated film cooler stretched from one side of the store to the other and it was stocked with so many different types and brands of film. There were posters everywhere showing example photos of the various films. In those days I was strictly shooting color reversal film and I’d always buy 2 or three bricks of 50 and 100 ASA film. Enough to last a few months of our weekend photo excursions. After shopping we’d head over to the Pentax Gallery. I’m not sure if the gallery is still there but at that time it was a real treat to see all the photographs on display; very inspirational.
And, another thing: I never developed my own film, the corner camera store did that for me; and back then in Yokosuka there was a camera store on almost every street corner. I’d get the slide film developed and instead of being mounted in plastic slide holders I get it in clear plastic sleeves. I’d rush home and put the sleeve on my light table and scrutinize each image with a big Pentax loupe. If I wanted something to be printed I’d mark the sleeve with a grease pencil (do they still make grease pencils?) and take it back to the camera shop to have it printed to whatever size I specified. My house was too small to hang pictures on the wall but my office walls were covered with my framed photographs. People used to visit my office just to see the pictures on the wall… it was terrific fun!
I’m retired now, all the corner camera shops are gone, I don’t have a photo buddy anymore and all my film cameras have been replaced with digital. I have lots of free time now and I shoot more than ever before, life is very good (knock on wood). I’m not going back to film but I can say that my memories of the good old days of shopping for film and our weekend photo trips are the best!
Oh, one last nostalgic thing; back then I used to go to the bookstore and buy photography magazines, lots of photography magazines. That was the only way we had to know what was going on in the photo world. The bookstore is gone now and the internet has replaced the magazines. Oh well.
All the best,
Mike
It's nice to have the physical artefact, the negatives, or positive slides, as a sort of (sort of!) permanent record. Digital files are fine but seem too ephemeral and keeping track of them is the devil of a job. ...
...In my 55+ year history of doing photography, I'd have to say that a hugely greater percentage of my film images compared to digital capture images, both negative and transparency, have succumbed to Time and are forever lost. None of my digital capture images have been lost—it's so much easier to replicate, organize, and archive digital images at 100% fidelity infinitely!
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I have been scanning my old negatives (and new ones), so I have both the film and a digital version. I recently had a hard drive fail, and am currently at loss of some of my film scans, and my digital RAW files plus osme of the converted jpegs (I klnow, my fault, I may pay to recover). But- for the new (and old) film images I still have my negatives. Some of my old negs and slides aged better than others for sure.
I shoot film because I like using all-mechanical manual focus cameras, I like the rendering of my old manual focus lenses, and I like the way film images look.
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I don't harbor any illusions about my images persisting after I'm gone. My family isn't even interested in my images while I'm alive, but I'm not making images for anyone other than myself. ...
Similar to my own reasons to keep using film as well.
I also do not have any illusions about what happens to my photos after I'm gone. On the rare occasions when I feel something I've produced is worth having persist, I make a small book of whatever it is I have made and register it with the Library of Congress, submitting a full resolution digital copy with that registration. If someone finds value in it at some unknown, future time, great. Otherwise, the cost is minimal and I don't mind the tiny burden of work and time to preserve something I like for the future to discover and ponder about...
G