Firstly, I obviously have a very, very 'vested' interest in film..........
But really the true 'value' of film never truly occurred to me before the advent of viable d****l cameras.
When you image on film it could not be simpler to me, your image is unique, especially but not exclusively in monochrome. You can be standing next to someone with the same camera, lens, film etc etc then take a photograph and both your images will be different. You will process differently and you will most certainly print differently from anybody else..thats it, you took it, you made it, its yours, nobody else can do it like you do it, an original.....
To me its also the creative drive, to use my knowledge and experience to make something as 'good' as I can, I am never going to be a Sexton or a Rudman or a Salgado but I can go through exactly the same creative loop as they do.
Finally everyone here at HARMAN knows the value of our heritage, it drives you to hopefully produce great products ( and I am absolutely sure its the same in KODAK and FUJI and FOMA and whoever ) but imaging on film is important for our personal and national cultural heritage. Billions and billions of photographs ( and motion picture of course ) have been taken on film and they actually EXIST, they can be stored, they can be printed they can be archived and they visually depict literally 'everything' since the 19th century.
With d*****l we honestly risk loosing so much, because if its not valued at that moment its lost for ever never mind the potential loss through storage technology in the future, its very simple, when your Mother went to the drug store to pick up her 36 prints in nineteen hundred and whatever she only liked three and actually only framed one but the other 33 were not thrown away they were 'valuable' and boy they were because she put them in a shoe box at the back of a wardrobe and she created history... yours.....that you can still enjoy.
Thats why I will always love and use film.
Simon.
ILFORD Photo / HARMAN technology Limited :