> Hello everyone, new member here, already overwhelmed by the
> wealth of (quality) content in the forums. I feel like a kid in a
> candy store; and (unfortunately) I'm not a kid anymore. At least
> not according to my birth certificate. 🙂
Give it up ... stay a kid. Much better that way
> I've been fascinated with photography since my high-school years,
> but for reasons not relevant here I only started to get seriously
> into photography in my early 40s, with a canon powershot G series
> point&shoot, a 5D Mark II and much later on a digital Leica M.
So you have plenty of time in doing photography, using different cameras from consumer grade to pro grade.
> Fast forward to the present, and to get to the point, it's time
> to depart on something I've delayed for far too long: film
> photography.
Stop thinking about "film photography" as being anything different from photography that you're already used to. Aside from different limitations of the recording medium (equivalent to using different cameras with different sensors, in large part) and the fact that you only get one ISO setting per film load, it's not a lot different. Those differences should be learnable in an afternoon, to first order, and then refined for the rest of your life.
> Preferably with a rangefinder camera shooting color
> negative film mostly. I'm still trying to find my way around all
> the info and technicalities, and one of the things I need to
> decide on is whether I need a metered camera or not. So, what I'm
> asking is this: If you were in my shoes, right at the start of
> your film photography journey, what would you advise knowing what
> you know now? Look for a camera with a light meter? Or don't
> bother with that and just use sunny 16 (or an external light
> meter or even a light-metering app)?
>
> Thoughts?
You're already familiar with a bunch of different kinds of cameras with different levels of automation and built-in metering. If there's anything different to be had with using film vs using a digital sensor, it's in how you expose the film to match your chosen development process. A built-in meter is convenient, but it also often leads to a certain amount of "not thinking about the specifics of the settings vs the scene dynamics" and just matching the needles or lights due to what the camera tells you. If you want to learn exposure, both for film and for digital capture, the best thing to do is to ignore the conveniences of built-in metering and metering automation, let yourself use a hand held meter and your eyes ... in other words, learn how to see the scenes you want to capture in terms of their light dynamics and understand how to expose them properly.
A light meter should provide guidance, not be the ultimate judge of proper exposure.
You are choosing to do color negative photography. This is without a doubt the easiest, highest latitude medium to learn exposure for, and unless you're planning to do your own C41 development (IMO a big waste of time...) it's questionable whether there's much or any real learning to be had from it: color negative processing is cheap, the machines at the labs are very very consistent, so there's little useful variation to take advantage of with home processing. You could almost ignore setting exposure beyond the very basics entirely ... which is how simple box cameras sold with color negative film get along splendidly and make some very nice photographs.
Choose to shoot B&W negative or color slide ... then your exposure choices matter and you have variation in processing that's worth exploring.
I can't tell you what's best for you.
I have both metered and unmetered cameras (both film and digital) and use them interchangeably. I learned photography on a 1947 Rolleiflex TLR and a 1951 Argus C3, shooting only B&W film. I use my eye, occasionally alone but often in conjunction with the in-camera meter when its there or with a hand held meter, or a scene chart for suggested exposures. With an automated exposure camera, if I turn on automation, I push the exposure around by guessing and using the EV Compensation control to get my best exposure for a scene.
It is all much of a sameness, regardless of digital or film, metered or unmetered, automated or manual. The key is to learn what you need for good exposure, and to think when making an exposure to use that knowledge.
G
"No matter where you go, there you are."