blockend
Member
Do you have any evidence for that?People who invested thousands of dollars in digital gear because they believed in the "film is dead" propaganda, can't stand the fact that film has not dissappeard, and is now gaining interest again.
Digital gear is relatively inexpensive shot for shot. If you bought the latest £2k camera every couple of years and traded in your old model, it would still be less expensive than shooting film.Their "wishful thinking" it that film has no future, because then they can justify for themselves that they have paid so much for digital gear.
That's a different subject. Two things are killing digital camera production, smart phones, and lack of digital camera innovation. Most people would be hard pressed to tell a 2018 digital photograph from a 2008 one under normal conditions. iPhones provide everything non-enthusiasts want from a camera, and make up much of the vlogging market.Fact is that the market for digital cameras has collapsed by 85% in the last years.
What are you comparing? All MILC cameras vs Instax and Polaroid cameras, or the popularity of instant films? A typical MILC runs between x6 to x20 the price of an instant film camera. Instant photography is a growing niche but it hasn't returned to the professional film ranks.And instant film is now a huge mass volume market again, being much much bigger than the market for DSLM / MILC cameras.
Film is dead to most people, no question. They don't use it and are surprised why anyone else does.The "film is dead" prayers only demonstrate their lack of knowledge of the current photography market developments.