Instant gratification, which is overrated in my opinion.I never shoot digital. I don't see the fun of it. Tell me, what is the fun of digital photography?
I rarely shoot film. I don't see the fun of it. Tell me, what is the fun of film photography?I never shoot digital. I don't see the fun of it. Tell me, what is the fun of digital photography?
I only shoot B&W film. For me the reason/fun of it, is printing in the darkroom. I also shoot digital. Whatever works best for what I want to achieve. It's nice to do both film and digital. For me it has nothing to do with slowing down, organic etc.I rarely shoot film. I don't see the fun of it. Tell me, what is the fun of film photography?
If you're here, I assume you like using rangefinders.I wish I could be that dedicated to the process, @Coldkennels, but the cost of that vs digital is just too much.
Add to this: the pleasure of using the beautiful mechanical cameras.If you're here, I assume you like using rangefinders.
My Leica M240 cost me £2,199. That's basically the cheapest option possible for a digital rangefinder.
My Leica IIIf cost me £175, and my Plustek scanner cost £160. Price difference of £1,864.
They can use the same lenses, so that cost is irrelevant.
Even if I wasn't bulk loading, a roll of Fomapan 100 is £5.50 for 36 exposures. I can develop it in Rodinal at home for about 34p (the bigger bottle will do about 41 rolls). Fixer is about 29p a roll. Total cost for each film is £6.13. Cost per shot is 17p, and the numbers drop down even further if you bulk load (about £3.37 per roll, or 9p per shot).
I'd have to shoot 10,964 shots on the M240 to "break even" compared to the cost of running the IIIf with commercially loaded Fomapan.
Even factoring in the cost of three dedicated FILCA cassettes at £10 a pop to bulk load, I'd have to shoot 20,377 photos on the M240 to get to the same price per shot.
Film really doesn't have to be expensive. But even then, to reiterate: I enjoy the process. I'm paying for that entertainment; the cost of doing it is no different to the cost of going to the pub and having a pint, or paying for a ticket to go and see a movie. I could pay £15 to sit and watch a film for two hours, or I could spend £15 to shoot a roll of film, develop it, and print it. That's far more than two hours of entertainment, so the cost is more than worth it to me.
Add to this: the pleasure of using the beautiful mechanical cameras.
I love old clocks too, I have a clock from 1871 that works perfectly. I couldn't live without it.
I'm here mainly because I wanted to get educated about the M3 and IIIa that I inherited from my Grandmother. I've only run one roll of film thru the M3 and none thru the IIIa. The M3 caused my hand to cramp so badly when using it I began to wonder what the Leica mystique was really all about. I bought a grip for it and it only helped a little.If you're here, I assume you like using rangefinders.
That's laughable...... tell me about how you're thinking about trading up to the Leica M11 at $10,000 body only....because film is just too expensive..... 😛I wish I could be that dedicated to the process, @Coldkennels, but the cost of that vs digital is just too much. I'd much rather spend the time and money on digital cameras and trying to get the results I want directly out of the camera. I don't spend a lot of time on PP since I can't afford the fancy software. My enjoyment of photography comes from getting the image I want directly from the cameras I have with as little manipulation as possible.
That's laughable...... tell me about how you're thinking about trading up to the Leica M11 at $10,000 body only....because film is just too expensive..... 😛