However, we run the huge risk of a loss of capability and experience as those of us brought up on film get older and fall off the perch, or loose our remaining few marbles. I am very encouraged every time I see a new person taking to film in grandads leicanikon heirloom but I find myself wishing that we collectively took the time to explain, and where possible, demonstrate the true wonder that is a perfectly exposed and printed or scanned negative and what it really is capable of as a medium. There is more to it than soot and whitewash.
That is something that I strive, to help others onboard film.
I participate in a photo club that has a fully equipped darkroom. I can't say I'm a master but I try to pass on the basics plus I've gathered lots of nerdy film details.
Ron Mowrey (Photo Engineer at APUG) who sadly passed months ago was a Kodak engineer and in many discussions, the technical complexity of film and loss of knowledge was a pressing issue.
I don't have the best close up view but the younger ones (I'm 25) picking up film in our photo club tend to stay away from the darkroom and just scan.
Why am I commited? I took 10 years to finally get access to a darkroom and do the whole process.
Thanks! 🙂
Slow shutter speeds (and film) are fine if you're shooting static objects, not so good for freezing motion. If someone is walking through your frame at 1/15s they're going to be blurry.
Well, not bad if it's the street and not the people as main subjects
😛
As far as I'm concerned, I do not admire digital capture, but I do admit it's convenience. I do like the Fuji digital look. In terms of its influence on film shooters - some who scan at home while others pay a pro lab, I find that those who scan at home will require years of skill and "eye" experience in getting a contrasty photo at home. The rest, will stick to the Frontier look, or the Noritsu look because these scanners are superb and bring out contrast (specially Frontier SP3000) that is just beautiful in the highlights. Many though will get used to the low res base scan of these and perhaps won't get any better or wouldn't care about how to improve their film photograph quality or just won't know because it requires real art in the eye of seeing colour nuances - experience.
On the other extreme, there's a whole bunch of people who like the "process" look - and most of these photograhs I do not like. What about the Portra over "exposed" "washed out" and "clean" look? Nice - but may get tiring.
I do like the overexposed Portra look and was surprised to see a roll of pastel 400H I shot last year during a town celebration. Looks like romantic wedding palette on the streets
😀 (OT as we discuss B&W). I rarely have high key B&W shots however.
I did once sit on a Frontier scanner station during a photo event where a quite popular lab brought one for photographers to test. The machine did great straight scans from a properly developed P400 neg. But there's of course some lightroom PP.
My color film (E6 and C41) is frozen as I find it a bit dead-ended to just have it scanned. I was lucky to discover a good lab in UK that does full res and even TIFF scans for a normal price (single digit amount!) but a few rolls get pricy enough compared to B&W material.
I have an Epson flatbed (4990 or the older one) that is OK but its scans don't compare to the tonality that one gets from a simple darkroom print. And much more boring to use
Back to the topic my main film in 120 is HP5 and my current routine is rather longer scale low contrast. I am "smart" too that I'm shooting this film in lower contrast light so there's a lot of grade 5 in split printing to give back some life to it.
I honestly don't shoot a lot and am able to print most of my frames, specially in medium format, so I don't experiment that much. Slower speed wise I've shot Delta 100 which is contrastier (box speed in HC110 may be it) and I like it for some usage although the flexibility of HP5 is very welcome in handheld medium format. 6x9 is a great platform and this film has enough grain and texture in it for my usual 24x30 print size.