> On Feb 8, 2015, at 9:57 AM, Malcolm Smith <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
>> BTW, I have and shoot with both film and digital cameras. They're much
>> the same and they're quite different. So are their images.  :-)
> 
> A few years ago I looked on line and in magazines to get film when I last had 
> a film body and it was very difficult; mostly old stock and/or short dated 
> film.
> 
> I looked today, and it was like looking ten years ago. Plentiful supplies, 
> even E6 long dated fresh supplies.
> 
> Something has changed and I guess it must be demand for it. Are there more of 
> you who still use film out there?

I only use B&W or outdated color negative film in 35mm or 6x6 these days. Most 
usually XP2 Super or Fuji ACROS 100. I like LONG outdated color negative film a 
lot: the color shifts and fogging lend each roll of it a unique look. 

The vast majority of my film photography is with Polaroid cameras, using 
Impossible Project B&W films for Spectra, SX-70, and 600 cameras. The reason is 
the same as above: each camera, each frame has its own unique look … a bit 
inconsistent, a bit special. You have to work the camera and film a bit to 
understand how to get what you want out of it. 

I've seen no point to shooting transparencies since about 1985 … too fussy on 
latitude, too fussy to scan or print, mostly just a PITA to work with.

I have a boatload of superb 35mm camera gear: Nikon, Leica M and R, a few fixed 
lens cameras. The Leica R8 body I obtained via an Ebay auction for $195 in MINT 
condition … didn't look like it had ever been used. What's that about film SLRs 
holding their value? That was a $2200 body in its heyday. What a superb (if 
heavy and large) beastie to shoot with though, and the lenses are to die for.

It's way more equipment than I need for the four or five rolls of film per year 
I shoot with them, but hard to let go of for sentimental reasons. All the 
lenses also work with various digital cameras so it's the bodies and fixed-lens 
cameras that are under-utilized. 

Yes, there is way too much little-used camera gear in the closet. :-| But if I 
were going to buy any 35mm camera at this point in time, it would be a Nikon F6 
body. Still in limited production, solid and reliable as a rock: probably the 
finest 35mm SLR ever made IMO. I'll likely never buy one, but it would be nice 
to have both the first and the last of the legendary Nikon F SLRs.

I have only one DSLR left: an Olympus E-1 and four Zuiko Digital lenses. 
Ancient, only 5 Mpixel, fast on capture but slow as molasses to write files, 
and the smallest DR/most limited ISO. But, having had a bunch of DSLRs before 
and after it, it's still one of the finest DSLRs ever made on build, 
ergonomics, and image quality to my eye. I'm glad I've kept it; if I'm only 
making 8x10s (or 12x16s with 2x pixel upscaling), it's all I'd ever need. I 
rarely make any larger prints, and even a 1024x768 image (0.8 MPixel) projects 
beautifully with the Epson projector.

G


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