- Joined
- Nov 16, 2004
- Messages
- 3,309
At around 5 € the Ilford films may be slightly more expensive in the EU than in US but we have B&W films priced under 4 € and Kodacolor under 3 € so while it is a cost I wont call it excesive compared to the US prices quoted. All in all I think we have compareable products at compareable pricesthey already make cheap plastic cameras that do a great job of introducing folks to photography -- problem is, they're sold by the lomo folks who seem to think a cheap plastic camera should cost $50 or even $100, which is just silly. Sadly, the Holga folk gave up the ghost a while ago.
I wish folks would quit moaning that film is expensive -- 35mm film in 100 foot rolls costs about 10 cents a shot, which when you factor for inflation is less than it cost me in college in 1970. Same thing for 120 film -- a buck a roll was cheap back them, the same "cheap" film would cost $5 or more a roll now factored for inflation, and you can get very nice ilford for less than that -- $4 at Adorama.
I didn't say that film could not be bought relatively inexpensively in Europe.
As for "taking a remark out of context", you bizarrely relate that context to digital technology, which does not form any part of what summicron1 was saying.
And when you factor in the full cost of the newer methods -- cameras that go obsolete in 3 years, computers and programs and digital printers -- well, there you are.
This kid has the right idea. I give cameras to the local university to help folks just like him, and so should you.
I dont think I claimed it to be better. To me though there is a difference between being forced to slow down and be thorough, work my way through exposure and composition as opposed to shooting away for free. You can offcource choose the same approach with either system but to me the trial and error method seem to thrive these daysAnd I can't begin to tell you how wrong-headed this whole "film slows you down and is therefore better" line is ... if someone has a problem with taking too many pictures (and how many is too many by the way?), then the problem is in the individual and not the medium. Let's not forget motor drives and 250-frame backs, eh?
Ok Il repeat myself thenreally, I don't mind people disagreeing with me, but if you're going to do so, at least make an attempt at addressing what I actually said rather than making wildly off target interpretations.
As for the OP, it occurred to me that when people call for a "new box brownie" they seem to forget that Ilford have a range of disposable cameras as I think Fuji may still do.
... if someone has a problem with taking too many pictures ... then the problem is in the individual and not the medium.
... (and how many is too many by the way?)...
No need to be trigger happy with digital either. Just because something can be done does not mean it should be done.Of course I wouldn't have been so trigger happy with a film camera.
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