Analogette
Member
- Joined
- Jan 20, 2016
- Messages
- 18
- Format
- 35mm
Hi All,
New to the forum but certainly not photography.
I've been a full time professional photographer for the past 12 years, specializing in animals and lifestyle. I shoot digital exclusively for work/clients, but never bring my (digital) Canon gear anywhere with me unless I'm being paid to use it because it's such a PITA.
For personal photos I either use my iPhone 6s or Pentax film cameras, which I love because they are both freeing. It's interesting experiencing something so analog and something so digital at the same time. I'll often use both the phone and the analog camera to photograph the same thing.
I love making pictures but I'm pretty burned out on doing it professionally. It has become exceedingly difficult to make a living at, no matter how much talent or business acumen a photographer has. Digital images are commoditized, the price has been driven way down, and the competition is very high. It's a losing battle as far as my research shows me and I'm ready to jump off the ship before it sinks completely. I'm in the process of starting up a new business and decreasing my need for my commercial shoots.
There are days where I fantasize about selling all of my digital gear and buying a nice rangefinder and several lenses, a bunch of 35mm lenses and a medium format body and lens. I drool when I think of just how much film gear I could get if I sold my digital gear. My Canon 5D Mark III was one of the worst $3.8K investments I've ever made in my life (2 years of 'moderate' use and now the sensor is visibly noisy at 400 ISO and up, requiring noiseware to be run on every photo taken). I won't make that mistake again. Digital is such a racket.
I got my start shooting film 26 years ago as junior in high school, and did my own darkroom developing at that time. I loved the shooting part but hated the processing part (still true). One of the things I love so much about film is I don't have to spend hours in Lightroom and Photoshop afterward, which I've grown to dread in my 'day job', even though I have my workflow down to a science. I just want to make pretty pictures and be done with it.
I picked up film photography again last summer and am really excited at what the future holds in store in this arena.
I'm more interested in the creative aspect of photography then the technical aspect, and you will never find me spending time arguing about what the best gear is to use. The best gear is the gear that gets you away from your computer and out shooting.
Looking forward to meeting people here!
Jamie
New to the forum but certainly not photography.
I've been a full time professional photographer for the past 12 years, specializing in animals and lifestyle. I shoot digital exclusively for work/clients, but never bring my (digital) Canon gear anywhere with me unless I'm being paid to use it because it's such a PITA.
For personal photos I either use my iPhone 6s or Pentax film cameras, which I love because they are both freeing. It's interesting experiencing something so analog and something so digital at the same time. I'll often use both the phone and the analog camera to photograph the same thing.
I love making pictures but I'm pretty burned out on doing it professionally. It has become exceedingly difficult to make a living at, no matter how much talent or business acumen a photographer has. Digital images are commoditized, the price has been driven way down, and the competition is very high. It's a losing battle as far as my research shows me and I'm ready to jump off the ship before it sinks completely. I'm in the process of starting up a new business and decreasing my need for my commercial shoots.
There are days where I fantasize about selling all of my digital gear and buying a nice rangefinder and several lenses, a bunch of 35mm lenses and a medium format body and lens. I drool when I think of just how much film gear I could get if I sold my digital gear. My Canon 5D Mark III was one of the worst $3.8K investments I've ever made in my life (2 years of 'moderate' use and now the sensor is visibly noisy at 400 ISO and up, requiring noiseware to be run on every photo taken). I won't make that mistake again. Digital is such a racket.
I got my start shooting film 26 years ago as junior in high school, and did my own darkroom developing at that time. I loved the shooting part but hated the processing part (still true). One of the things I love so much about film is I don't have to spend hours in Lightroom and Photoshop afterward, which I've grown to dread in my 'day job', even though I have my workflow down to a science. I just want to make pretty pictures and be done with it.
I picked up film photography again last summer and am really excited at what the future holds in store in this arena.
I'm more interested in the creative aspect of photography then the technical aspect, and you will never find me spending time arguing about what the best gear is to use. The best gear is the gear that gets you away from your computer and out shooting.

Looking forward to meeting people here!
Jamie