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I went to a party over the weekend with a group that went with me and my wife to Greece and Turkey last June. We did some catching up since the trip. When the email was circulating on who is going to bring what to our potluck, my fellow analog photographer friend said he had no photos to show since he shot mostly film. I shot both, but I shot 20 rolls of film and processed them already. He told me that with his job that where he works and travels so much, he doesn't have time to process the film and he seriously thinking about going digital.
As I mentioned, I processed all my film, but they're still in sleeves until I can get some darkroom printing time. All I did was scan the negs.
My question is how does analog photography fit with your modern life? As for me, It's very hard to process film and print with my life. I currently have a full time job, a wife and I'm also caring for an elderly mother. But my I plan to retire in 7 years or less so I can do more analog photography. I hate to admit this, I get my photography fix with my Iphone.
I thought about this and think you are right, most things we have now are disposable,our cloths,digi camera's, food, cars, when it ware's out just go buy a new one, we should have plenty of extra time, but I don't . But still develop and print, but not as often as I would like.
Mike
party
how does analog photography fit with your modern life?
I'm retired.
Wife left long ago.
Kids grew up and moved on.
Friends have mostly moved to other locales or kicked the bucket.
I have no one to look out for save myself and my dog.
Film photography (along with good books and good music) not only fits my life it IS my life.
And life is good.
It fits fine, as instead of taking 7000 digital images, I may take 7 film images.
Does this mean that for those that strictly photograph digitally are creating something that's ephemeral and not a cherished object?
On a trip to Greece and Turkey you'd take 7 pictures?
I hate to admit this, I get my photography fix with my Iphone.
My question is how does analog photography fit with your modern life? As for me, It's very hard to process film and print with my life. I currently have a full time job, a wife and I'm also caring for an elderly mother.
What's modern about that? When I was growing up, some dads worked two jobs, and lots of us had grandparents living with us instead of in a "retirement"/nursing home. There's nothing modern about wanting more free time.
So are we wasting our time being online and on other modern pastimes like watching cable instead of doing analog photography? Is this why most of us don't cook, garden or sew our own clothes because of the modern lifestyle? Do we need to slow down? Is the excuse of the modern lifestyle making analog photography difficult a lame one?
On a trip to Greece and Turkey you'd take 7 pictures?
Greece and Turkey? OK, I'm sure I'd take 8 pictures.
Does this mean that for those that strictly photograph digitally are creating something that's ephemeral and not a cherished object? If so, what does that say about analog photographers?
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