Larry Cloetta
Veteran
I've got a Sony RX1RII, so I know what good, current digital looks like. Two other digital SLR bodies as well. Most of the time it just sits there, and if I'm shooting, I'm shooting film over 90% of the time. Most of the reasons have already been listed above. Worse than that, of the many film bodies I own, when I grab something to go out the door, more often than not, it is one of the technically less sophisticated bodies, with the lenses that exhibit loca, coma, spherical aberration, or some other supposed horror. Don't know why other than I obviously just must enjoy it more that way.
The one big thing that digital does better than film is resolution. I could care less. The level of resolution needed to make a beautiful photograph, was handily surpassed by a Spotmatic with a SMC 50/1.4 decades ago.
People obsess about resolution because you can put a number on it. Not everything which can be measured is beautiful, and not everything which is beautiful can be measured.
"I love my lens, it has such wonderful corner sharpness." Meh. Good for you, you two will be very happy together.
"Digital is better because it's sharper." No. It's not. It's sharper because it's sharper. "Better" denotes something else entirely. You can't measure what makes a better photograph.
But, for a lot of people, that's the alpha and the omega of what a better camera is-it's "sharper" (easier too. no chemicals.) Meh. You're a chemical too, get over it. Does what denotes worthwhile photography get to be defined according to the narrow, measurable fixations of those who prefer digital? Not seeing any objective reason that should be the case, though those who believe that to be the case seem to feel comfortable being the arbiters. ("It's sharper. I can print bigger than makes any real sense for most people. Because I am such a lousy photographer I don't understand how to look at a scene and frame the thing that actually makes an interesting photograph, I can just press this thingie and later crop away the 80% that is pointless. looking for the good photo that must be in there somewhere, like Michaelangelo finding David in that big piece of marble. Because I have 42 megapickles of resolution, and you don't, because you have film, which is so last year.)
For me, it is about the process, at least as much as the result, and the process of film, taken as a whole, I find vastly more entertaining than digital, at least to this point. Garry Winogrand left, what, 2500 of undeveloped film behind, more? Vivian Maier, same thing. My contention, could be wrong, is that they just enjoyed the process of getting that far, far enough to stick them in the drawer and forget about them until later, and get back out and do some more of the fun part. And what is exciting about "later" with film? The eternal film question: "Did it come out?" "Oh, look, that's cool!" With digital, you don't get that. Of course it "came out". Not only that, because it is a high quality digital image generated by a modern sensor, it looks exactly like the other twelve hundred billion digital photos taken today, in aesthetic terms. Really sharp, possibly even without blown highlights.
"Look, I can take another picture of my wife/girlfriend/Shih tzu lit only by candlelight, and our food, because 256,000 ISO." Okay, if that fills a perceived artistic need for you, I guess that is a huge advantage for you. I struggle on without those, my life much diminished, I am told.
Others may disagree, possibly excitedly, but am only answering the question which was asked. Shorter version: Speaking only for myself, film is just way more fun to shoot and process, plus, to my eye, the results, unpredictable as they sometimes are, are way more interesting, day in and day out.
God knows I've tried do make myself love digital and make myself find it rewarding, or even interesting, and am still trying, just not there yet.
(If I had to produce photographic product for a living I'd be singing a different tune. Fortunately, for me, this is just an avocation.)
"Honey, don't you think that Monet thing with the water lilies would have been better if it had been sharper."
The one big thing that digital does better than film is resolution. I could care less. The level of resolution needed to make a beautiful photograph, was handily surpassed by a Spotmatic with a SMC 50/1.4 decades ago.
People obsess about resolution because you can put a number on it. Not everything which can be measured is beautiful, and not everything which is beautiful can be measured.
"I love my lens, it has such wonderful corner sharpness." Meh. Good for you, you two will be very happy together.
"Digital is better because it's sharper." No. It's not. It's sharper because it's sharper. "Better" denotes something else entirely. You can't measure what makes a better photograph.
But, for a lot of people, that's the alpha and the omega of what a better camera is-it's "sharper" (easier too. no chemicals.) Meh. You're a chemical too, get over it. Does what denotes worthwhile photography get to be defined according to the narrow, measurable fixations of those who prefer digital? Not seeing any objective reason that should be the case, though those who believe that to be the case seem to feel comfortable being the arbiters. ("It's sharper. I can print bigger than makes any real sense for most people. Because I am such a lousy photographer I don't understand how to look at a scene and frame the thing that actually makes an interesting photograph, I can just press this thingie and later crop away the 80% that is pointless. looking for the good photo that must be in there somewhere, like Michaelangelo finding David in that big piece of marble. Because I have 42 megapickles of resolution, and you don't, because you have film, which is so last year.)
For me, it is about the process, at least as much as the result, and the process of film, taken as a whole, I find vastly more entertaining than digital, at least to this point. Garry Winogrand left, what, 2500 of undeveloped film behind, more? Vivian Maier, same thing. My contention, could be wrong, is that they just enjoyed the process of getting that far, far enough to stick them in the drawer and forget about them until later, and get back out and do some more of the fun part. And what is exciting about "later" with film? The eternal film question: "Did it come out?" "Oh, look, that's cool!" With digital, you don't get that. Of course it "came out". Not only that, because it is a high quality digital image generated by a modern sensor, it looks exactly like the other twelve hundred billion digital photos taken today, in aesthetic terms. Really sharp, possibly even without blown highlights.
"Look, I can take another picture of my wife/girlfriend/Shih tzu lit only by candlelight, and our food, because 256,000 ISO." Okay, if that fills a perceived artistic need for you, I guess that is a huge advantage for you. I struggle on without those, my life much diminished, I am told.
Others may disagree, possibly excitedly, but am only answering the question which was asked. Shorter version: Speaking only for myself, film is just way more fun to shoot and process, plus, to my eye, the results, unpredictable as they sometimes are, are way more interesting, day in and day out.
God knows I've tried do make myself love digital and make myself find it rewarding, or even interesting, and am still trying, just not there yet.
(If I had to produce photographic product for a living I'd be singing a different tune. Fortunately, for me, this is just an avocation.)
"Honey, don't you think that Monet thing with the water lilies would have been better if it had been sharper."