John Wiegerink
Subscriber
Oh, I agree with every
Oh, I agree with everything you say. I shot my first two weddings in 35mm and it was only after much encouragement from the folks of the first two weddings and family/friends that I then took the big, big, big finical outlay to buy my medium format outfit. A Bronica S2A boomer camera. I moved to much lower decibel cameras after that. What I'm getting at is this.........with film cameras most pro folks at the time used medium format, which cost much, much more that any 35mm system. Yes, in film size matters very much and those bigger sized negatives were a pleasure to work with, but it cost you in $$$ to have them. Not everyone had the drive, desire or money to continue to pursue a business in photography. Mouths to feed, rent to pay, and all other living expenses need $$$ now and that "now" has killed more than one dreams. With digital the average person can have an outfit that is as good image-wise as the pro by just pinching a few pennies for a few pay days. It doesn't take any time at all to start shooting professional looking quality photos digital. I really like film, but to be honest I dreamt of something like what we have now when I was shooting weddings. I guess I was just born a little to early. JohnWExcept with digital the barrier to entry is basically non-existent so you have every wayward shutterbug with a Squarespace website nipping at your heels. It's very easy to create clear, nice looking images. It's very much more difficult to create a successful business that is sustainable long term.