Down Under
Member
No, this isn't a poll. Comments are surely more interesting to a majority of us than ticked boxes.
At home recovering from (thankfully minor) surgery this week, I've had some free time to ponder this (and many other) interesting questions. I've also discussed this with other friends who are into photography, and the comments we have come up with have been varied and interesting.
So what made you decide to move from film, either party or entirely away from film, and into digital?
For me (and for once I will be brief with this, full knowing I can add more comments later as I go and as, I hope, this thread evolves), it was in 2008 when Nikon came out with the D90.
A friend kindly loaned me his D90 and after doing a few test shoots, for the first time I realized Nikon had FINALLY produced a 'prosumer' (= not requiring me to refinance my house mortgage to buy one) camera with results to a level of quality I was happy with. I quickly bought one and a few years later, a second as a backup.
I've now moved to the D700 but my D90s remain my backups and the DSLR my partner prefers to use for family and travel shots. A few good lenses have been added but my SO is happy with the 18-55, the VR-ED version which I paid way too much for when new. Now all Nikon DX 18-55 kit lenses have some ED glass. VR, what is it? I've never used it. .
For B&W, my backups are film.cameras - five or six Nikkormat FT2s and ELs and two F65s. All produce the goods to my complete satisfaction, although involving the necessity of maintaning a home darkroom,which I enjoy, and no end of evenings spent scanning (and imbibing good Tasmanian Pinot, about which I cannot say enough good things), which I enjoy rather less (the scanning, that is) but needs must,
I also shoot MF, mostly with Rollei TLRs but now and then with a Perkeo I folder. When my architecture practice began showing modest profits in 2000 I blew my budget on Hasselblads. Alas, I never did bond with this camera, mostly due to the complex loading system, slap-up mirror and other minor aggravations, and after retiring in 2012 I sold off the entire lot, a 500M and CM plus lenses and a carton of film backs and other fiddly bits, in time to make a small profit before the downturn in 'blad gear prices in Australia. I still use the Rolleis even if 120 film prices Down Under are too much for a retiree and well into the upper niche market.
I am first and foremost a documentary shooter (retired architect, nowadays mostly shooting old architecture) and I find the results from my film work varies according to a list of 'variables'. The scanning can be a pain and often I have to redo a 'difficult negative several times, fiddling with scanner settings, to get the result I want or acceptable to a client. Sharpness can be a problem with scans.
With digital color, I have no such worry. My post processing involves little by way of adjustments beyond some color cast changes, a little sharpening when needed to spiff up RAW images, and now and then an attempt at being "arty", usually discarded at the end of the session. I had two years of making sepia copies of color images, but I've now given this up as basically taking me no place.
I enjoy processing and some printing (not so much the scanning), but digital photography has freed me from what I've long regarded as the enjoyable tyranny of film and the darkroom. At 71, I have less time left in life and I prefer to make the best of my days by seeing friends, being outdoors and travel - my nearly six decades of agitating Nikkor tanks, hovering over my Leitz Focomat enlarger or eyeballing my developing prints through the gloom of a 15W safelight, are now behind me. Age has wearied me, and needs must.
I did say "brief" (I really must look up that word in Google), so I'll say no more for now . Over to you all. Many others, I hope. As always, I greatly look forward to your comments.
At home recovering from (thankfully minor) surgery this week, I've had some free time to ponder this (and many other) interesting questions. I've also discussed this with other friends who are into photography, and the comments we have come up with have been varied and interesting.
So what made you decide to move from film, either party or entirely away from film, and into digital?
For me (and for once I will be brief with this, full knowing I can add more comments later as I go and as, I hope, this thread evolves), it was in 2008 when Nikon came out with the D90.
A friend kindly loaned me his D90 and after doing a few test shoots, for the first time I realized Nikon had FINALLY produced a 'prosumer' (= not requiring me to refinance my house mortgage to buy one) camera with results to a level of quality I was happy with. I quickly bought one and a few years later, a second as a backup.
I've now moved to the D700 but my D90s remain my backups and the DSLR my partner prefers to use for family and travel shots. A few good lenses have been added but my SO is happy with the 18-55, the VR-ED version which I paid way too much for when new. Now all Nikon DX 18-55 kit lenses have some ED glass. VR, what is it? I've never used it. .
For B&W, my backups are film.cameras - five or six Nikkormat FT2s and ELs and two F65s. All produce the goods to my complete satisfaction, although involving the necessity of maintaning a home darkroom,which I enjoy, and no end of evenings spent scanning (and imbibing good Tasmanian Pinot, about which I cannot say enough good things), which I enjoy rather less (the scanning, that is) but needs must,
I also shoot MF, mostly with Rollei TLRs but now and then with a Perkeo I folder. When my architecture practice began showing modest profits in 2000 I blew my budget on Hasselblads. Alas, I never did bond with this camera, mostly due to the complex loading system, slap-up mirror and other minor aggravations, and after retiring in 2012 I sold off the entire lot, a 500M and CM plus lenses and a carton of film backs and other fiddly bits, in time to make a small profit before the downturn in 'blad gear prices in Australia. I still use the Rolleis even if 120 film prices Down Under are too much for a retiree and well into the upper niche market.
I am first and foremost a documentary shooter (retired architect, nowadays mostly shooting old architecture) and I find the results from my film work varies according to a list of 'variables'. The scanning can be a pain and often I have to redo a 'difficult negative several times, fiddling with scanner settings, to get the result I want or acceptable to a client. Sharpness can be a problem with scans.
With digital color, I have no such worry. My post processing involves little by way of adjustments beyond some color cast changes, a little sharpening when needed to spiff up RAW images, and now and then an attempt at being "arty", usually discarded at the end of the session. I had two years of making sepia copies of color images, but I've now given this up as basically taking me no place.
I enjoy processing and some printing (not so much the scanning), but digital photography has freed me from what I've long regarded as the enjoyable tyranny of film and the darkroom. At 71, I have less time left in life and I prefer to make the best of my days by seeing friends, being outdoors and travel - my nearly six decades of agitating Nikkor tanks, hovering over my Leitz Focomat enlarger or eyeballing my developing prints through the gloom of a 15W safelight, are now behind me. Age has wearied me, and needs must.
I did say "brief" (I really must look up that word in Google), so I'll say no more for now . Over to you all. Many others, I hope. As always, I greatly look forward to your comments.
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