pbromaghin
Subscriber
I like film because I make the decisions, not the camera.
This is what makes me do it, too. That, and just how hard it is to do it right.
I like film because I make the decisions, not the camera.
I like film because I make the decisions, not the camera.
I enjoy shooting film and making wet prints in my darkroom too. I just try not to make a religion out of it.
I love the look of film, especially medium format. The image quality in general, the grain structure. The fact that film does not have uniform pixels, but grain of varying size which can only be mimicked by computer. The final print, which is can only be appreciated in person. Trying to make a comparison in digital terms does not account for these things. Its not so much the camera itself. Film and printmaking are like eating a real piece of fruit after having only eaten artificially flavoured candies. It is fully satisfying as an artist.
What the heck! What is going on here? ... Doesn't the XT MB only have 8-bit slots? And how is the 486 upgrade not being severely bottlenecked? Wow.My restored/goosed up IBM PC/XT
Real photography?Yes I have digital (not the latest I may add) and yes they are a wonderful tool, but not necessarily the best one for engaging in real photography.
To the digital process... it's a fundamental thing.
In what way is it "minimalist" when it requires film, camera, paper, a darkroom, an enlarger, two separate chemical processes, and a period of hours/days in order to view the photograph?
When we start out, taking a photograph is indistinguishable from magic. As a child I thought it actually was magic, a result of my mother's dire warnings about opening the box camera and the Brownie imagery that accompanied its marketing at the chemist. It may as well have contained pixies, so inconceivable was the link between pressing a lever and obtaining an exact replica of a living (or sometimes dead) person.It feels so much more right to take pictures with film
...This isn't a criticism BTW. I find the taking, processing, scanning and/or printing of photographs taken on film to be extremely time consuming. ... It's worse at holiday periods when I'm averaging more than a film a day, sometimes much more. The backlog can get silly.....
This happens to me as well. It appears that despite the error message, the post actually has been completed. Just don't complete the second attempt, and a single post will appear as it should.I keep getting an error message when I attempt to post, which is causing duplicate posts.
I keep getting an error message when I attempt to post, which is causing duplicate posts.
John, 127 mm lens, not 127 film.
This happens to me as well. It appears that despite the error message, the post actually has been completed. Just don't complete the second attempt, and a single post will appear as it should.
I'll report this to the moderators for Sean's attention.
And equally important, one person's vintage is another person's "fairly recent".Until you specify a year, the term, "vintage" doesn't really mean anything. As in, "vintage 1963" or "vintage 2004". Using "vintage" by itself could refer any year. Even last year.
Real photography?
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