I bulk load like it's going out of style.
It's cheap, it's easy, and everyone should do it.
I use old bulkloaders I bought on
ebay, and DX coded metal cassettes I got from freestyle.
I was really anxious about it, because I started bulk loading only a couple months after I started photography, particularly about exposing a whole hundred foot roll.
But it turns out my fears were unfounded. The bulk roller was sort of idiot proof. I loaded up about twenty cassttes.
Then I figured out that I had not taped them properly putting the tape all the way around the spool onto both sides of the film.
So they would come loose in the camera after the last frame was shot instead of rewinding....that sucked.
I then figured out how to reroll them all from one cassette into another empty cassette.
After that, every roll worked out fine, and I taped all further rolls I made properly and it's been smooth sailing ever since.
I used to carefully husband my film resources.
Now I shoot a roll per subject. 20 bucks or so per roll of arista.edu, equals 18 rolls of 36, or usually like I do it, about 30 something rolls of 20 something frames.
That works out to what? 65 cents a roll?
I just ordered another two rolls, this time of arista II and one of each 100 speed and 400 speed.
I don't think I'll be paying six bucks a roll for tmax at the local any time soon.
I also like being able to roll just what I want on a roll. It's nice, because all the frames on my contact sheets can be a single subject.
Sure I lose a bit on the leader length on every roll, but I just like 20 frames better. Some people put more than 36 frames on a roll, like 44 or something, which is, I think the max that will fit on a developing spool. That saves change time when shooting sports and is more technically economical I think, but meh... it's not for me.