marylandphoto
Member
Hello.
I apologize if this has been posted before; I didn't see it on the last few pages.
With that being said, I don't know how many of you have noticed, but vinyl record sales have been up the upswing as of late. This has been all over the news, for reasons which may include the fact that the average viewing American would find it funny that some crazed "nuts" may actually still utilize an "old" medium. It's a fairly modest increase, and perhaps the trend won't continue, but it did get me thinking about some things.
Now, I'm one of the ones to ride this wave. I'm almost too young to remember the end of vinyl's heyday, yet I found myself borrowing an old record player of my friend's and buying and playing vinyl records. There's a whole slew of reasons why someone may prefer vinyl over film. CDs, and in turn, MP3s have taken most of the physical ritual out of the medium. Additionally, the warm sound of vinyl is contrasted with the compressed, loud sounds of the digital music (for reasons easily found by Googling). To make a long story short, I've learned about a musical experience which I think beats the CDs I've played and heard.
But anyway, what I'm trying to get at is, the same reason I found myself listening to vinyl is the reasons I like film. I prefer the experience, the "look", and all the things we all enjoy about analog photography.
Do you think it's possible we could see something similar with film? Again, I'm not talking about film becoming the primary photography medium of choice, but perhaps in a few years people get sick and tired of the unromantic routine of digital and some return to the "real" thing? The year to year sales of vinyl increased approximately 30%. That's not bad for a medium whose use defies all common marketing sense: they're more expensive, they wear, they require more care, etc. The same argument you could make for film photography over digital. It's not just older folks too, it's young people like me (<=30). I think this is an interesting topic because it may be interesting to see who and how many may reject digital media (to whatever extent) and why.
I apologize if this has been posted before; I didn't see it on the last few pages.
With that being said, I don't know how many of you have noticed, but vinyl record sales have been up the upswing as of late. This has been all over the news, for reasons which may include the fact that the average viewing American would find it funny that some crazed "nuts" may actually still utilize an "old" medium. It's a fairly modest increase, and perhaps the trend won't continue, but it did get me thinking about some things.
Now, I'm one of the ones to ride this wave. I'm almost too young to remember the end of vinyl's heyday, yet I found myself borrowing an old record player of my friend's and buying and playing vinyl records. There's a whole slew of reasons why someone may prefer vinyl over film. CDs, and in turn, MP3s have taken most of the physical ritual out of the medium. Additionally, the warm sound of vinyl is contrasted with the compressed, loud sounds of the digital music (for reasons easily found by Googling). To make a long story short, I've learned about a musical experience which I think beats the CDs I've played and heard.
But anyway, what I'm trying to get at is, the same reason I found myself listening to vinyl is the reasons I like film. I prefer the experience, the "look", and all the things we all enjoy about analog photography.
Do you think it's possible we could see something similar with film? Again, I'm not talking about film becoming the primary photography medium of choice, but perhaps in a few years people get sick and tired of the unromantic routine of digital and some return to the "real" thing? The year to year sales of vinyl increased approximately 30%. That's not bad for a medium whose use defies all common marketing sense: they're more expensive, they wear, they require more care, etc. The same argument you could make for film photography over digital. It's not just older folks too, it's young people like me (<=30). I think this is an interesting topic because it may be interesting to see who and how many may reject digital media (to whatever extent) and why.