cosmonaut
Well-known
To me it seems that if you don't want to enjoy the process of developing and scanning, then why not just stick to digital? With film, I develop, scan at low res, select the keepers (very few), rescan at max res for those at my scanners max res. Print on R2400. Select the best and to the darkroom for analog printing. I shoot both film and digital. I doubt if the camera (Leica or Holga) makes any difference in choosing to process your own film, as it's basically the same with whatever you choose to shoot. Maybe I'm over simplifying. Just my thoughts.
Because its more fun and rewarding to make a print in a darkroom. With image stabilization, electronic view finders, articulating screens, super sharp lenses, HDRs and mind blowing image quality, I have all, it can just can take the dang fun out of it.
After a few straight days of shooting digital I just need to frickin' unplug so to speak. Don't get me wrong I would take an M9 any day but that certainly wouldn't stop me from shooting film. I always thought the Leica experience was all about film anyway. I really was surprised when Leica came out with the M8. I feel there will always be a film market and ditching their film line would be a mistake.
There is nothing like standing back and looking at a nice picture I have taken with no computer or software help. It's not a film vs digital thing. Its one thing helps me appreciate the other kind of thing.
Plus take a couple of great digital shooters, Trey Ratclif and Tommy Hawk, both really are good. But they fire so many shots their work, to me is over whelming and redundant. Slow down, try something new. Where is the fun in HDRs where you stack ten crappy pictures to make one good one, do it right in the field is a better craft.