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Angarian

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Hello,

I've been a "silent reader" here for years, but I think it is finally time to register :smile:.
Born in Switzerland with father and mother from Germany and Austria, grandparents partly from the Netherlands, and former ancestors also from Denmark and Sweden, I am and feel as a European completely ;-).
Also because my profession led me to several European countries, and currently I am working mostly in Berlin.
A city with a very active film photography scene.
I am taking photographs since my childhood, and I have never stopped using film. During the "digital revolution" I have also done a lot in digital imaging, but for several reasons now I am mostly back to film, with 90-95% of my photography being shot on film again.
I am looking forward to very interesting discussions and information exchange with you!

Regards, Martin
 
Ein "Willkommen" aus Hamburg!

Welcome from Hamburg!
 
Welcome to Apug !

Currently I am working mostly in Berlin.
A city with a very active film photography scene.

Not so for other major european cities I visit. You are lucky.
 
Hello and welcome! I'd be interested to hear why you moved back into film?
 
servus aus wien :D

lg

thomas
 
Thank you all for your kind words and the friendly welcome!

Welcome to Apug !
Not so for other major european cities I visit. You are lucky.

Oh, from my experience there are also very active film communities in London, Paris, Barcelona, Rome, Zurich, Vienna, Prague, Warszaw, St. Petersburg and Moscow.
In Germany there is also quite a lot going on in Hamburg, Cologne, Hanover, Stuttgart, Frankfurt, Dresden and Leipzig. Of course not as much as in Berlin, but the local scenes are also growing.
 
Hello and welcome! I'd be interested to hear why you moved back into film?

Oh, there are lots of very different reasons. Just to list some of the most important:
- I prefer the look of film, for me it looks much more natural and 'organic' than digital; digital looks always a bit artificial to me.
- The film look cannot be emulated by software: If you compare real film and film emulation it always looks different. If you want the film look, you have to shoot film, if you want the digital look, you have to shoot digital. Period.
- Film has much better archivability: It is long term stable and archiving is much much cheaper and easier than digital long term storage.
- I do like film cameras more.
- In my case shooting film is cheaper.
- In my job I am sitting in front of a computer all day long. I don't want to do the same in my rare free time. So film for me is like "vacancy" from the boring computer work in my job. It is relaxing when I print in my own darkroom, so much fun and creativity! The same is valid when i look at my brilliant slides on the lighttable, and even more when I enjoy my slide projections.
- With reversal film / slide film can offer a complete unique medium which digital cannot offer at all. These unsurpassed brillant colors, this 3-D like look are simply outstanding. When I project my slides with my Leica and Rollei projectors it is like I've been back in the scene just at the moment when I have pressed the shutter! To get the same quality with digital is impossible: The resolution of digital projectors is crappy and much much lower than what I've got with my slide projectors (I've done direct comparisons). The digital projected images are flat and don't have the three-dimensionalty film delivers. And the color brillance of reversal film is much better, too. And digital projectors are extremely expensive.
 
Welcome to APUG Photrio
 
On behalf of the Canadian delegation, I wish you a pleasant journey on Photrio. *hat tip
 
In Germany there is also quite a lot going on in Hamburg, Cologne, Hanover, Stuttgart, Frankfurt, Dresden and Leipzig. Of course not as much as in Berlin, but the local scenes are also growing.
In Cologne that for sure has not reached the respective academy. And not Düsseldorf which calls itself the hub of photography...
 
Glad you're with us, Martin. Berlin, a great city, so much to photograph. You're a lucky fellow!
 
In Cologne that for sure has not reached the respective academy. And not Düsseldorf which calls itself the hub of photography...

Well, just "around the corner" there is the the FH in Dortmund and the Folkwang Schule in Essen. Both offer intensive education in their photography studies in classic film photography. I know students who are studying there because of the very good film education there.
In Berlin there is the Lette Verein with excellent education in film photography.
And even the FH in Hanover (organiser of the LUMIX festival for photojournalism) as a mainly digital oriented institution has film education (including darkroom) in the first semesters.
 
Oh, there are lots of very different reasons. Just to list some of the most important:
- I prefer the look of film, for me it looks much more natural and 'organic' than digital; digital looks always a bit artificial to me.
- The film look cannot be emulated by software: If you compare real film and film emulation it always looks different. If you want the film look, you have to shoot film, if you want the digital look, you have to shoot digital. Period.
- Film has much better archivability: It is long term stable and archiving is much much cheaper and easier than digital long term storage.
- I do like film cameras more.
- In my case shooting film is cheaper.
- In my job I am sitting in front of a computer all day long. I don't want to do the same in my rare free time. So film for me is like "vacancy" from the boring computer work in my job. It is relaxing when I print in my own darkroom, so much fun and creativity! The same is valid when i look at my brilliant slides on the lighttable, and even more when I enjoy my slide projections.
- With reversal film / slide film can offer a complete unique medium which digital cannot offer at all. These unsurpassed brillant colors, this 3-D like look are simply outstanding. When I project my slides with my Leica and Rollei projectors it is like I've been back in the scene just at the moment when I have pressed the shutter! To get the same quality with digital is impossible: The resolution of digital projectors is crappy and much much lower than what I've got with my slide projectors (I've done direct comparisons). The digital projected images are flat and don't have the three-dimensionalty film delivers. And the color brillance of reversal film is much better, too. And digital projectors are extremely expensive.

My thoughts exactly-I'm totally hooked on 4x5 transparencies, they're well worth the price!
 
My thoughts exactly-I'm totally hooked on 4x5 transparencies, they're well worth the price!

Oh yeah, 4x5 transparencies are really great!
And projecting 35mm and medium format slides is absolutely stunning and a league of its own! Cinema at home, but with much better quality!
 
It's such a shame you can't get the Kenro Black Mask Sleeves now-however I did find a whole pack of 6x6 ones when I was tidying my darkroom recently!
 
It's such a shame you can't get the Kenro Black Mask Sleeves now-however I did find a whole pack of 6x6 ones when I was tidying my darkroom recently!

Those are getting rare -I ordered a pack of 50 Kenro A4 Black Multi Mask 6x7cm (6 transparencies / mask) for my FUJI GW670 transparencies a few weeks ago in the UK. 6x6 was out of stock but there were 6X8 and 5x4''.
 
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