PKR
Veteran
I started a similar thread few years back, "Why are we using medium-format film?"
Like here, lots of comments. Reading them all, it seemed the common thread was, "Because I love my camera."
I noticed that too. Pretty interesting.
I started a similar thread few years back, "Why are we using medium-format film?"
Like here, lots of comments. Reading them all, it seemed the common thread was, "Because I love my camera."
As you can see from the number of posts, I was an active form member for many years -- over the last few yesrs not s' much. This is because it was at this point that I switched over to digital. In the early to mid-2000's digital was an emerging tech and it was also relatively expensive. Simply, imo, the quality of digital did not yet match that of 35mm film. No way. Film cameras and lenses were available cheap on the used market and film was still able to be purchased and developed locally at many, many locations.
However, digital tech has matured since I'd say about the 2010's. It is comparable to film -- better, actually, in low light. Prices have dropped. My primary shooters are a Nikon 5300 that has a great 24 MP sensor without an AA filter. $389 shipped refurbed. And my "rangefinder" is an Olympus ZX-2 -- used $150. I print at home from an Epson inkjet. The quality of both these cameras exceeds (Nikon) or comes close to (Olympus) any of the 35mm cameras I've ever used. Meanwhile, the places I can purchase and have color film developed have dried up nearly completely.
Since effectively "going digital" I don't feel as though it's "proper" to post (sometimes troll) here these days. I was a film die hard. But there comes a point....
Yep, and we have all bought into one of these yet again, highly trivial opening posts. I think this site is much better than most, the excellent imagery made by members is evidence of that. So I really have to sometimes question the value of what almost seems like "Staff" trolling.....
About digital gear having improved, who really cares? I mean, I wouldn’t enjoy more Frank’s book The Americans if it were done with an M9 and an aspherical lens… I wouldn’t enjoy it more in any way, at all, because what’s enjoyable in photography has no relation with sharpness or with any other technical part of the image, but only with heart and mind, and any cheap lens or camera can produce the most wonderful photograph…
You made a technological choice, not an artistic one it would seem, which is fine.
But answer me this then: Why did I, a full time professional of 30 years who started using digital in my work in not 2000 but 1994 never stop using film? And why, even as I buy cameras like a Nikon D750, D810, Leica M240 and even a $10,000 Hasselblad digital back, also invest well north of $100,000 into film cameras, film, paper, chemistry, darkroom equipment and even property to have a state of the art darkroom?
I'll spare you the thinking. For me, digital will *never* replace the experience, the journey, the love, the result and quite honestly the income earning potential that a real darkroom print provides for me.
I''m not alone in this and that is why film use has now risen to this wonderful niche. By the way, you can still post here, plenty of us see the value in using digital and are on this site....so I am not sure what that is all about...
Edit, I saw your second post, I would have perhaps skipped this post had I seen that...🙂
That said, if you want to still shoot film for anything other than sentimental reasons, medium (or large) format, develop your own black and white negs, and invest in an enlarger and a darkroom. That is a different animal entirely from digital -- a true hand craft, and there's something truly magical about the output that digital simply can't rival.
Agreed. But conversely there are a lot of people who think that a photo is better simply because it was made with film...
The delay also results in a bit of separation and I seem to be able to be a little more objective when I view the results.
Really though, the film advance alone is a tactile delight.
Canon 5D. Introduced in 2005. Made up to 2008. I purchased it in 2010 (2008 made), used it a lot until 2016.
![]()
It beats color film and M8/M9 under low light and it renders better comparing to MKII and after. To me it is the best digital camera made so far. No useless, over twenty, MPs. Very clean rendering. Minimum menus, close to M9, not typical load of menus in 2010 and after camera.
Canon 5D spare parts are cheap and available. Canon DSLR cameras are DIY for parts exchange. Like changing shutter assembly or screen unit.
Right, but it also seems that some folks on the digital side are arguing that there’s no reason for using film anymore. Film is dead, time marches on, get over it…
Moreover, if I’m asked why I shoot film, I’m not necessarily arguing against digital, and I’m certainly not trying to dissuade other folks from using digital.
But yes, I hope that most of agree that a good photo is a good photo irrespective of the methodology used to create it.
Use what you want, use what you need, and thank god for choice.