I find it funny that the OP after asking about film cameras is making fun of film shooters mid way through his thread. Not only that but he goes from asking if Canon still produces film cameras to making a BS statement about why Canon stopped making film cameras…
Then he just insults the people he originally asked for help. WOW! Neil S., I’m sending it right back at you. You are an idiot you digital fanboy!
In the space of 3 pages you’ve become an expert. I’m amazed.
That said, I agree with two statements that have been made here:
1/ Not much point in shooting film if you’re not going to do the darkroom work yourself.
Because the biggest difference you will see when comparing film and digital is in the print. To me that also means shooting B&W since the only color prints I’ve ever liked were Cibachrome (now known as Ilfochrome) and the last I checked it was not a process one does at home. Although printing color at home is far from unheard of, as Superman seems to think.
2/ It makes very little sense shooting film for commercial work today.
Commercial clients want the ease of dealing with digital files because it makes the process of going to press much simpler.
Most of the rest of the thread is as much nonsense as the dreaded Nikon vs. Canon, Ford vs. Pontiac, Black vs. White, Mac vs Windows machines BS.
Yes, shooting film is a pain in the neck compared to shooting digital, in many ways, but when it comes to my art work I will take film over digital any day. And anyone who says that a digital print is as good or better than a print from film is either a moron or has never seen the two next to each other. Or maybe they’re just blind.
(Kind of like people who think CDs sound better than LPs. And today, most people don’t even listen to CDs, they listen to MP3s which are about as good as cassettes, lol. One needs to keep in mind that the common denominator in today’s society is going towards lower and lower quality in everything. In the name of the great god, Ease/Cost!
And in case you don’t know, sales of vinyl have gone up at the same time that sales of CDs were crashing. Not only that but the big recording studios who went all digital were soon buying analog equipment back for at least one studio because there was a demand for it.)
Of course, I am not talking about drugstore processing/printing… That will get you cheesy results. But it will whether you’re printing digital files or from negatives. The best prints from digital are made by pro printers just as it was with film. And in the pro printer’s world there are many levels of quality.
But since most people don’t care to spend the money needed to get those good prints, most prints are as crappy as they ever were. And unfortunately, that is not the only problem with the digital revolution in photography.
Another problem is that people shoot so much they barely even look at what they have shot before moving on to the next shoot as is obvious from multiple threads on this forum.
Yet another problem is that most people never bother to print anything at all. They look at their photos on the computer. Funny considering that photography is still, despite the internet, mostly a printed media.
And, to Derrel, the longevity of digital photos (and media in general) is such a big problem that the government is trying to set up some sort of standard for archiving it. This problem was mentioned big time when Eastwood’s movies about Iwo Jima came out because they were called the last movies of this type that will ever be made. Thanks to digital.
Yes, today’s soldiers communicate with their families via email and since those emails will not be saved for long we will lose this kind of historical record. The same is true with photography and this is not the first time I talk of that. I own 2 amazing collections of glass photos that would simply not exist if they had been shot in digital, considering how they were stored.
Those two sets were shot by amateurs who didn’t a single thing about preserving them. Not to mention they didn’t care because they didn’t see them as anything special. But because of how well film (glass in this case) lasts, those images are still with us.
The average digital shooter on the other hand will do no more to save his/her files but the files are so fragile, they’ll be gone in no time. How many threads about multiple back ups which end up costing a fortune do you need before you can admit that?
Btw, damaged negs are better than no photo at all.
Quote: Originally Posted by supraman215
People were also doing math before calculators. So? If I can use a calculator to get me the product of 345*251 faster than I can do it on paper then I'll use a calculator. Because the answer will be instantaneous. Why would I want to wait when I know the result will be the same?
The result won't be the same if you don't know how to do it on paper and you won't know how to do it on paper for long unless you continue to do it on paper at least some of the time.
Anyone who’s been in line at the grocery store when a customer handed over 17 cents to the cashier to round up what their change will be after said cashier rung up the $10 bill that was first given can attest to that. The brain is a muscle that needs to be used if you want to keep it, lol.
Now, this is an argument from someone who really doesn’t have an argument: “Is it lonely on your pedestal?” And my response usually is: Do you feel better as part of the herd? Do you have a problem thinking for yourself? Or are you so brain dead that you will listen to a Sears photographer as your God?
I find this really funny because I have never seen a film shooter trying to force anyone to shoot film. On the other hand, I see plenty of digital only shooters trying to convince people that film is stupid. And they rarely are the best of photographers.
In the US we’ve been taught for years that progress is good, is the way to go but we haven’t been taught to actually think about why because that would be dangerous to the corporate mindset that sells the newest thing no matter how it makes our life better… or not.
Quick example and then I’ll leave you to your BS: My parent just bought a new washing machine. The one that finally just died was 30 years old. Do you think your brand spanking new washing machine is going to last a third of that?
I am not naive enough to think that film is “better” somehow though.
And since you have never used film, what the fook do you know? You’re a joke. Get over yourself and , mostly/also, get over Derrel.
Derrel is the equivalent on this forum of the silent majority in our political life. He is neither the majority not silent.