Paul Jenkin
Well-known
It's a horrible predicament and I can understand your frustration and your desire to have guaranteed, quality output. You must, however, make the choice alone as you are the one who must decide whether you want to learn / relearn film developing or to go down the digital route.
In my opinion, the questions to ask yourself are whether digital can provide the same joy in using the camera, processing the images in software and (possibly most importantly) will you be satisfied with the digital output? If the answer to these questions is "yes" then the answer is right in front of you.
I trod this path a few years ago and bought a digital SLR. I had a great time for a while but I really missed film as I'd used it since the early 1970s and its imperfections and idiosyncrasies were (and remain) part of its charm and appeal. Now I'm back shooting film 95% of the time - though I still like digital and will never understand why we should feel we HAVE to choose one over the other.
In my opinion, the questions to ask yourself are whether digital can provide the same joy in using the camera, processing the images in software and (possibly most importantly) will you be satisfied with the digital output? If the answer to these questions is "yes" then the answer is right in front of you.
I trod this path a few years ago and bought a digital SLR. I had a great time for a while but I really missed film as I'd used it since the early 1970s and its imperfections and idiosyncrasies were (and remain) part of its charm and appeal. Now I'm back shooting film 95% of the time - though I still like digital and will never understand why we should feel we HAVE to choose one over the other.

