Huss
Member
...a pocketable point and shoot 35mm camera ....
My Pentax LX...
Missed the point completely.
...a pocketable point and shoot 35mm camera ....
My Pentax LX...
... that is a shot of the Hoover Dam at night.
Thanks, the boat shot was just to try out my new shutter open indicator.
The OP didn't say anything about tripods but you can always set it on something flat and stable.
The scenario for me was a smartphone vs my 37+ year old Pentax LX (big pockets but pocketable). I just got the new samsung S8 but initial test indicate it will still not fare well in the same scenes as above - with or without a tripod.
I don't know what kinds of scenes the OP likes to shoot but for me, I like long exposure times and they are not something smartphone's do well at all. This one using the Pentax LX in aperture priority mode with Kodak Ektar 100. Was >40minute exposure time.
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Do you have any of the long exposure time shot using slide film?
In one sense, it is the one you have (phone) vs. the one you don't have (the 35mm P&S at home).
I've forgotten to bring my P&S with me more times than I care to remember (sitting right by the front door ready to go), but my phone is clipped to my belt and my wife's is in her purse.
Personally, I would rather use a P&S film or digital camera than the phone camera. But that is just me.
I would also rather use my SLR than the P&S. But I am not carrying the SLR every place I go. And I have missed MANY pix because of the hassle of pulling out the SLR.
Each piece of gear can go things the others cannot do, so each has it's place in the tool box of a good photographer. And it is up to the photographer to select the best tool for the job.
Who called whom luddites? The OP already excluded the reason picking the P&S because it uses film.No need to call people Luddites.
A recent thread discussion highlighted the fact many people enjoy the process involved in shooting film (development and darkroom). As well, they appreciate the look that film provides to a photograph. In light of this, the P&S I think would be preferrable.
Let's get back to discussing analog photography. How about P&S vs vidicon!
...the benefits are of using a pocketable point and shoot 35mm camera over a phone.
I have no smart phone, nor do I want one.the pics are all junk face it!Now, I know this is an analogue only place and I don't want to offend anyone but since most of us have mobile phones with a camera we probably consider it to be a useful point and shoot in itself. My friend asked me an apples and pears question about the benefits are of using a pocketable point and shoot 35mm camera over a phone. I thought I'd put it to you here. Aside from the obvious case for the look of film and the love people have of the process. I guess we would be talking about quality most of all. Surely the lenses are superior and detail extractable from the negative is on a whole other level.
I have no smart phone, nor do I want one.the pics are all junk face it!
Its a RAW file. If the picture is junk its your processing thats at fault not the file.
but their metering is very accurate.... a poorly exposed camera shot is a very rare thing.
This gear is being used in high end films - its very very powerful image system
a decent digital sensor can do 14 stops which is more than most films. I have no idea what sensors youve been using to come to that conclusion
If I had one of the latest generation, high end smart phones, there would be things that I would do with their cameras that I don't do with film. But mostly, I wouldn't replace my film cameras with them.
The new technology is interesting, and wonderful, and concerning, and potentially dangerous, and expensive. And it is sufficiently different from the other, older technology that I like as to not come close to replacing that older technology in my life.
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