StepheKoontz
Member
I shot with film for decades before digital was even a thing. I never used auto focus film gear and the most automated film camera I ever owned was an OM-2n. I mostly shot medium format and 4X5, and enjoy working in my B&W darkroom. I didn't even try digital until it was at the 5-8mp sensor time frame and got an olympus E1. When olympus dropped 4/3 I switched to Nikon. I tried several different systems and while I got good results with my FX Nikon gear, I just didn't really enjoy using it. There just wasn't the intimacy that a manual focus camera has.
One of the other things I have enjoyed is collecting vintage gear, mostly focused on the mid to late 50's stuff. I feel this was really the pinnacle of the fully mechanical cameras and the simplicity of a camera that used no battery. But I kinda lost interest in collecting when I switched to digital.
Fast forward to earlier this year, when I took out my vintage Rolleicord V, loaded it with some T-max 400 that had been sitting in my fridge for 20 years, and went out shooting. THAT was the joy I was missing in my photography. Something about using an early film camera, using a hand held meter and really thinking my way through each shot really has brought joy back into shooting.
I'm actually enjoying photography again, not being able to chimp the shot immediately and having to wait to develop the film to see the results. Knowing I only have a limited number of frames and trying to make use of each one. Since then I've picked up a Leica IIIc and a Nikon S2, and been shooting with old 35mm rangefinder gear. I can clearly see the difference in these prints I'm making in my darkroom, and anything I ever got from Digital as far as really good B&W photography. I'm hooked on going out shooting almost every day now.
I will still totally still use digital for the event photography work I do, but I just felt I was missing the fun I used to have shooting film. I missed the time I spent in the darkroom trying to get the most I could from a negative. The pure analog process is just so different and refreshing to me.
One of the other things I have enjoyed is collecting vintage gear, mostly focused on the mid to late 50's stuff. I feel this was really the pinnacle of the fully mechanical cameras and the simplicity of a camera that used no battery. But I kinda lost interest in collecting when I switched to digital.
Fast forward to earlier this year, when I took out my vintage Rolleicord V, loaded it with some T-max 400 that had been sitting in my fridge for 20 years, and went out shooting. THAT was the joy I was missing in my photography. Something about using an early film camera, using a hand held meter and really thinking my way through each shot really has brought joy back into shooting.
I'm actually enjoying photography again, not being able to chimp the shot immediately and having to wait to develop the film to see the results. Knowing I only have a limited number of frames and trying to make use of each one. Since then I've picked up a Leica IIIc and a Nikon S2, and been shooting with old 35mm rangefinder gear. I can clearly see the difference in these prints I'm making in my darkroom, and anything I ever got from Digital as far as really good B&W photography. I'm hooked on going out shooting almost every day now.
I will still totally still use digital for the event photography work I do, but I just felt I was missing the fun I used to have shooting film. I missed the time I spent in the darkroom trying to get the most I could from a negative. The pure analog process is just so different and refreshing to me.