but, yesterday myself and wife went on a "birds of prey" experience. 8 cameras in the group - 1 DSLR, 2 film SLRs inc me, 5 d*l compacts. There's hope yet!
It proves that people still use film. My Maxxum 8000i looks like a digital camera from a distance. When I'm out shooting sometimes a person will look to see the LCD image I just shot. When they see there is no screen I have to explain it is a film camera. Then comes the puzzled looks.
It proves that people still use film. My Maxxum 8000i looks like a digital camera from a distance. When I'm out shooting sometimes a person will look to see the LCD image I just shot. When they see there is no screen I have to explain it is a film camera. Then comes the puzzled looks.
That is funny! But understandable. Having gone the other way, starting on film, and only fairly recently getting used to digital – I got my 10D not long after the model came out in early 2003 – I practically never look at the screen when shooting digital. I do use the screen, but I usually wait till I reach a good stopping point rather than shoot-look, shoot-look, shoot-look. In studio shooting products, I do this because I do not want to have to set something up again because I shook the camera or slightly messed up focus or something else, but not out in the "real world." There, I think that paying attention to what is going on around you trumps worrying about the minute details of every shot. I feel weirdly out of touch and a bit disoriented when I chimp out "in nature."
i did that last weekend during a portrait shoot. the majority of frames were captured on my 5D; then when I switched to my FTb loaded with Tri-x, I looked at the back of the camera, and then, of course, so did the client (over my shoulder).
but, yesterday myself and wife went on a "birds of prey" experience. 8 cameras in the group - 1 DSLR, 2 film SLRs inc me, 5 d*l compacts. There's hope yet!
I hope you showed the Compact camera people just how easy a film camera is to use so that if they decide to upgrade to a camera that allows them more control they might consider a film SLR and not a DSLR.