foc
Subscriber
In last Sunday Times Culture mag (UK & Ireland Sunday Times) there was an article about Lomography and how the writer thought film was dead but on further investigation found that it hadn't gone away, it was just harder to find. (I couldn't find any links for the article)
The article wasn't just about lomo, and the writer dusted off his old film camera and started shooting film. He explains why it is so different from shooting digital, no instant viewing, the fun of waiting till the film is developed, the undeleated shots because its film. He ended the piece saying "Lomo say the future is analog but I say God shoots film with Leica M6".
My main reason for writing all this is that I own a photo shop/minilab in the North West of Ireland, and 3 people came into the shop today to buy film and mentioned the article in the newspaper. They said that they too took out the old film camera from the back of the drawer and now wanted to shoot a roll of film. If the article had that effect on a small rural community where I live, how big an effect did it have on other bigger towns and cities across Ireland and the UK. It was good to see a positive piece in the media about film.
By the way in another section of the same paper it mentioned that Kodak reckon that there are around 12 billion analog cameras world wide sitting in drawers/presses/cupboards etc. If this could stimulate even 1% to take the camera out and shoot a roll, wouldn't that be something.
The article wasn't just about lomo, and the writer dusted off his old film camera and started shooting film. He explains why it is so different from shooting digital, no instant viewing, the fun of waiting till the film is developed, the undeleated shots because its film. He ended the piece saying "Lomo say the future is analog but I say God shoots film with Leica M6".
My main reason for writing all this is that I own a photo shop/minilab in the North West of Ireland, and 3 people came into the shop today to buy film and mentioned the article in the newspaper. They said that they too took out the old film camera from the back of the drawer and now wanted to shoot a roll of film. If the article had that effect on a small rural community where I live, how big an effect did it have on other bigger towns and cities across Ireland and the UK. It was good to see a positive piece in the media about film.
By the way in another section of the same paper it mentioned that Kodak reckon that there are around 12 billion analog cameras world wide sitting in drawers/presses/cupboards etc. If this could stimulate even 1% to take the camera out and shoot a roll, wouldn't that be something.