Film, like any camera which uses it, is a tool. As a tool one needs to use it for tasks which is it best suited to, and I honestly find it exceptionally tiring to deal with people who get overly hung up on their personal choice of tool because they tend to become one themselves. Film is a great tool, and I know I'll keep using it and exploring it for as long as I'm able to. (Even if it means scrounging together the funds and time to just make it myself.)
A hammer is great at driving nails, but rather crap at driving screws. An 8x10 camera shooting your choice of your favourite film is a beautiful thing to work with, but it is utter crap if you have hundreds of small cheap items to photograph and upload to a web store. It is also utter crap if you're photographing and reporting on an ongoing breaking news item, or trying to photograph a suspect in a crime you're witnessing. Film is especially crap if you're trying to deploy a 24/7 security surveillance system somewhere.
Film is less than ideal for casual shooting and sharing with your social circle through modern telecommunications. Sure, I could make a small print and mail it to a friend, and have them mail it to the next, and so on, or I could make a bunch of prints and mail them all out in one go... But for a fairly simple casual "Hey look at this cool place/event/thing you might find interesting..." it is rather hard to beat a digital image for the ease of use and speed.
The childish name calling and building a wall between "Us and them" is a great way to drive people away from film.
It is a tool, one of many in the photographic arts, and frankly I find the idea of 'purity' and 'one system or the other' to be foolish and down right idiotic.
Want to shoot on film, make contact prints on traditional paper, and hang on a wall? Awesome.
Want to shoot on film, make enlargements, do detailed post processing in a dark room, and then send stuff off to a printers to make books? Awesome.
Want to shoot film, develop the negatives, scan, post process on a computer, and print your art on a large format inkjet? Awesome.
Want to shoot digital, post process, digitally print a negative, and then contact print on light sensitive paper? Awesome.
Want to shoot digital, post process on a computer, and share with the world online? Awesome.
Want to do some other random combination to produce art which makes you happy while you keep exploring and growing? Awesome.
Do you want to belittle others and claim superiority over them based on your tools and methods to get to your end goals? ... Not awesome. Not remotely awesome, and anyone who does is an egoistical fool who is probably very tiring to be around, and is more likely to drive people away from artistic endeavors and isn't someone I wish to spend any amount of time with.
At times it honestly feels like the biggest enemy to the growth and future of film as an art medium are the users of film. Holier than Thou zealots gathering in groups, standing at the ready to drive off any who don't share their exact views with sticks and stones. It can be hard and tiring to find open and welcoming conversations in a middle ground where those involved are happy to give credit and keep an open mind about any and all processes... And, well, honestly digital is just 'easier'. So guess which way younger artists are likely to swing if all the groups they find keep pushing to one end or the other? Humans aren't really known for deliberately doing things the knowingly hard way.
A hammer is great at driving nails, but rather crap at driving screws. An 8x10 camera shooting your choice of your favourite film is a beautiful thing to work with, but it is utter crap if you have hundreds of small cheap items to photograph and upload to a web store. It is also utter crap if you're photographing and reporting on an ongoing breaking news item, or trying to photograph a suspect in a crime you're witnessing. Film is especially crap if you're trying to deploy a 24/7 security surveillance system somewhere.
Film is less than ideal for casual shooting and sharing with your social circle through modern telecommunications. Sure, I could make a small print and mail it to a friend, and have them mail it to the next, and so on, or I could make a bunch of prints and mail them all out in one go... But for a fairly simple casual "Hey look at this cool place/event/thing you might find interesting..." it is rather hard to beat a digital image for the ease of use and speed.
The childish name calling and building a wall between "Us and them" is a great way to drive people away from film.
It is a tool, one of many in the photographic arts, and frankly I find the idea of 'purity' and 'one system or the other' to be foolish and down right idiotic.
Want to shoot on film, make contact prints on traditional paper, and hang on a wall? Awesome.
Want to shoot on film, make enlargements, do detailed post processing in a dark room, and then send stuff off to a printers to make books? Awesome.
Want to shoot film, develop the negatives, scan, post process on a computer, and print your art on a large format inkjet? Awesome.
Want to shoot digital, post process, digitally print a negative, and then contact print on light sensitive paper? Awesome.
Want to shoot digital, post process on a computer, and share with the world online? Awesome.
Want to do some other random combination to produce art which makes you happy while you keep exploring and growing? Awesome.
Do you want to belittle others and claim superiority over them based on your tools and methods to get to your end goals? ... Not awesome. Not remotely awesome, and anyone who does is an egoistical fool who is probably very tiring to be around, and is more likely to drive people away from artistic endeavors and isn't someone I wish to spend any amount of time with.
At times it honestly feels like the biggest enemy to the growth and future of film as an art medium are the users of film. Holier than Thou zealots gathering in groups, standing at the ready to drive off any who don't share their exact views with sticks and stones. It can be hard and tiring to find open and welcoming conversations in a middle ground where those involved are happy to give credit and keep an open mind about any and all processes... And, well, honestly digital is just 'easier'. So guess which way younger artists are likely to swing if all the groups they find keep pushing to one end or the other? Humans aren't really known for deliberately doing things the knowingly hard way.