Film Vs. Digital: The True Costs

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  • čas přidán 31. 03. 2017
  • In this video i explain why shooting film is always the most affordable way to get involved in photography.
    For 35mm Film processing and high quality scans visit:
    www.foresthillfilmlab.com
    / killindreams
    / foresthillfi. .
    / travis.mortz
    foresthillfilmlab@gmail.com
  • Krátké a kreslené filmy

Komentáře • 788

  • @massmanute
    @massmanute Před 4 lety +6

    Ken Rockwell once made the argument that the least expensive way to do photography is to shoot with a 4x5 view camera. Part of the reason is that you don't machine gun with a 4x5. One takes relatively few shots, making each one count, so the film and development cost is typically actually less than using a 35mm camera. And of course, the quality potential with a 4x5 is simply light years ahead of that of a digital camera.

  • @peterp2626
    @peterp2626 Před 5 lety +87

    This should be called "Why digital is more expensive if you make every stupid decision possible."

    • @nickfanzo
      @nickfanzo Před 4 lety +1

      Peter P how many digital cameras have you gotten in twenty years?

    • @ufukkiblat
      @ufukkiblat Před 3 lety +2

      @@nickfanzo How many film cameras have you gotten in twenty years? And how many film rolls?

    • @fraudsarentfriends4717
      @fraudsarentfriends4717 Před 3 lety

      And the First stupid mistake of many would be buying a digital camera.

    • @nerwanisnoone1937
      @nerwanisnoone1937 Před 3 lety +4

      This is the truth. I shoot both film and digital and enjoy both. My DSLR was bought second hand and cost me 200 pounds. In the last 12 months I've taken 10,000 images (a number bumped up by a few time lapses and astro adventures) and I've decided to keep 1500 images. Given that I probably wouldn't keep all my film images either, I think it's fair to assume that's somewhere between 70-100 rolls of film. I've just started home development, but that still costs 8 pounds per roll. Before that I was developing at a lab and that was costing me roughly 16 pounds per roll (and this is entry level film). So, if I'd done the same with film that'd be anywhere from 800 - 1600 pounds worth of film costs. So 4 - 8 times more expensive just in the first 12 months. (And this is assuming the film camera was free, my lovely Pentax Spotmatic with the 1.4 lens cost me 120 pounds because I wasn't lucky enough to find one that good in a thrift store, hence the price of the camera's wasn't even that different because I had to pay the going rate on ebay)

    • @arricammarques1955
      @arricammarques1955 Před 3 lety

      Digital breaks down. Also 35mm negatives reliable archive. Cameras last for DECADES : )

  • @1989Goodspeed
    @1989Goodspeed Před 7 lety +4

    Hey Travis.
    Thank you for recommending this film. A few months back my parents went on a trip to Sardinia (Italian island) and I was at home watching over the house (and the cat) so I wanted to give them a gift for the trip…
    So I snuck my Nikon EM loaded with a roll of Fujifilm C200 and the Nikon series E 50mm f1.8 into my dad’s luggage, when they came to the hotel they phoned me to say the hade arrived and I told them to look under my dad’s baseball caps were the camera was hidden. I told my parents that they had 36 images to take and I would scan them when they got home and hade the roll developed. Now I have scanned the negatives and the result was insane, that X-factor of film almost brought tears to my eyes. One image in perticuler was a portrait of my mom taking by my dad while she was taking a landscape shot with her smartphone… That just summed it all up so beautifully: the sterility of digital vs. the organic X-factor of film.
    All the best Tobias Go 1989 ;-)

  • @jonjanson8021
    @jonjanson8021 Před 7 lety +40

    Film is pay as you go .
    Small amounts of money spent over time .
    No need to get big credit card bill.
    Runs on clockwork, no electricity bill.
    Developing is easy. kitchen sink and a tap.
    About as difficult as making a good cup of coffee.
    Well done Travis you talk a lot of sense.

    • @jonjanson8021
      @jonjanson8021 Před 7 lety +2

      Most photographers are hobbyists.

    • @jonjanson8021
      @jonjanson8021 Před 7 lety +7

      Most photographers never become pro.
      Most photographers never want to be a pro.
      They do it for the love of the art.
      The new will follow for a pro when it makes economic sense to invest tens of thousands in new pro equipment.
      Being a pro is about making money, not spending it.

  • @DC-mm3wy
    @DC-mm3wy Před 7 lety +16

    Hello . Dave from Ireland here :). I'm a professional camera operator working with HD digital professional cameras . I'm really liking your vids and how it's evolving . I shoot film outside of work. My main 35mm cameras are my Nikon f100 and my Olympus OM1 . I have medium format cameras and other film cameras.The big digital camera companies have swamped the market with cameras and now are having problems maintaining there ridiculous revolving door system of releasing a new camera ever few months. Sony Nikon and canon have all had problems recently and had slow downs in profits margins . Nikon letting lots of staff go . My point is they have suckered the consumer into a cycle of constant upgrading that's just not needed. Yes it's true it happened with film cameras when they where the latest thing . However back in the film days companies put there best work there best innovation into there latest camera now they hold back technology just to create more cameras to flood the market . Same crap with phones and cars etc... I shoot film outside of work 90% of time and my digital I carry around is a nine year old Ricoh GR . Don't buy into the hype .... Shoot film . Love the channel I'm def a fan .

    • @johnrflinn
      @johnrflinn Před 4 lety +1

      I like the Olympus OM1 as it has mirror lockup and it totally manual. It only needs batteries for its light meter. So nice to get away from plastic fantastics that are out of date in 6 months and cost thousands of dollars.

  • @merkury06
    @merkury06 Před 7 lety +4

    I bought a used F100 in 2010 for $225, they still sell for around $200 and I honestly can say I have not missed a shot. Low light, within a stop or two the lab can still give me a great image. Plus all my film is scanned at the lab and digitized. I still want to get a DSLR but I always passed because I just could not justify the cost versus the amount of shooting I do.
    Great video.

  • @jaidamann8365
    @jaidamann8365 Před 5 lety +15

    I shoot both film and digital. For me, digital is a lot less expensive. The chemicals for film has an expiration date, and gets weaker after every use causing me to buy more chemicals. Then if I want a print (if not using a computer or scanner) will cost extra for the equipment needed.
    Having said that, film is so much fun to use/shoot. But the facts presented in this video is not entirely accurate. Plus if you’re using a computer and scanner for film, why would I need another computer for my digital images?

    • @Homelessuser3351
      @Homelessuser3351 Před 2 lety

      So, you are rich. You shoot film "and" digital. Cost is not an issue here. I buy it all!!!!

  • @ibsoarin
    @ibsoarin Před 7 lety +2

    No matter what others say, they have to admit that you are entertaining and you promote discussion about analog film photography.
    Keep the videos coming.

  • @ufukkiblat
    @ufukkiblat Před 3 lety +4

    "this images don't stop working" Until you lost it or it's damaged by fire or something else. Meanwhile the digital files can be backed up and......*drum roll*....printed!
    Are you gonna say that you could scan your film and back them up? then all you have is digital file which then..why not shoot digital in the first place right?

  • @ssthapit
    @ssthapit Před 3 lety +3

    I don't know what he is talking about. I bought Canon 10D brand new in 2003 and used it for 7 years. Even then going digital seemed cheaper in the long run than film. Then I bought the 50D brand new in 2010. Since then the digital camera specifications have exceeded my needs and I recently got a used full frame Canon 5D Mark II for $400. So shooting digital has gotten cheaper and cheaper. These people keep comparing the cost of the latest and greatest digital cameras with cheap old film cameras. A fair comparison is to compare used pro digital gear with used film cameras + film cost and then digital makes much more sense in terms of cost. Now if you enjoy shooting film then by all means do it. But justifying it in terms of cost is bizzare.

    • @eakishway
      @eakishway Před 3 měsíci

      I have similar thoughts when watching the video. Shooting digitals do have other costs, for example Lightroom subscription costs about 10 USD every month and a fast computer. Also the cost to ensure that photos are backed up properly for several decades. But for cameras, film cameras are not necessarily cheaper than digital cameras. One will buy old film cameras but only buy new digital cameras and upgrade to the latest ones every year? This assumption is uncommon. If uncommon assumptions are allowed, I can assume that one wants a native black and white photos, then compare the price of Pentax K-3 Mark III monochrome to cheap old SLRs with B&W film, or Leica M11 Monochrom to cheap old range finders with B&W film.

  • @theoldgranddude
    @theoldgranddude Před 7 lety +17

    I use to shoot film and now digital. My question is this. How much does it cost you to shoot and develop 1000 pictures? Between film purchase in bulk and development. I calculate around $687.00. I know because I used to shoot weddings on the cheap and for 3 rolls of and development I spent well over 125.00 dollars and that was in the 1980's. Once I make my initial investment in my camera, I can shoot a thousand pictures a day with zero cost. This is just a no brainer. And by the way cameras where just as costly back then or more than they are now.

    • @ForesthillFilmLab
      @ForesthillFilmLab  Před 7 lety +3

      Glen Wood well. 1000 frames would be approximately 27 rolls of film. Based on the cheap Fuji film I showed here that would cost me $77. One color chemical kit costs $25 and can develop all of those rolls for me. So. To answer your question. It costs me about $102 to shoot and develop 1000 frames of film. And then I'll have 1000 more images then you have.

    • @ForesthillFilmLab
      @ForesthillFilmLab  Před 7 lety +1

      Glen Wood how much does it cost YOU to make 1000 tangible photographs? Because shooting a 1000 files a day doesn't mean shit to me. You aren't done yet just making 1000 images in a day. Those images don't exist in the world yet. Your hard drive is not a binder of images sorry.

    • @davidwarren7279
      @davidwarren7279 Před 4 lety

      @@ForesthillFilmLab You said that it costs you $7 for a pack of 10 rolls, but where I live, my local camera house charges $15 per single roll to buy (I can't recall the cost of developing).

    • @pilsplease7561
      @pilsplease7561 Před 4 lety +1

      @@ForesthillFilmLab Film is fantastic. I love film, It looks better , is a superior medium and you are connecting on a physical level to your images. They arent on some piece of shit hardrive that can die and take all your work with it. I just hope film lasts another 100 years. Or ill be deeply depressed. I couldnt live in a time where i couldnt shoot film

    • @germangonzalezlamas4848
      @germangonzalezlamas4848 Před 3 lety

      @@davidwarren7279 you’ve been ripped off. Don’t support local stores because they are not supporting you. Unless is an emergency, although amazon or any other webpage will provide better prices at all.

  • @Ruud_Brouwer
    @Ruud_Brouwer Před 7 lety +10

    10 years, 130 rolls of film. So only one roll a month? 5d all of a sudden seems cheap ;)

  • @jaeAre200
    @jaeAre200 Před 5 lety +1

    New Sub!! I greatly appreciate your enthusiasm!! It's awesome. I've been shooting digitally for a few years and recently JUST bought my first film camera. It's in the mail. I'm f*&%ing stoked! And I wanna sloooowwly turn my streetphotography channel into film. So kudos to you for all the tips and having me reconsider my digital upgrades.

  • @the92project
    @the92project Před 7 lety +14

    I love your passion for film Travis, I love film too and I shoot as much of it as time allows me. Time being the keyword there. I think Digital is a great way to cut down the time needed to think-shoot-develop(process) an image. My rule is simple, when I need to shoot fast I shoot digital, when I am lucky to plan my shoot and think about what I want to do I use film. Im no pro, Im married with a 2 year old, and a job in a cubicle. I would never tell people (regular folks) that film is cheaper, I don't think it is. Because in addition to a film camera, film, development, there is TIME and time for most people is scarce and too valuable - I know it is for me, extremely. I think that's why digital is cheaper, it cuts down the cost of TIME. Of course my opinion is based on the experience of MOST people that go and buy a reasonably priced dslr with a kit lens. good video!

    • @ForesthillFilmLab
      @ForesthillFilmLab  Před 7 lety +5

      The Cantrell Project a photo only takes a fraction of a second to take. Film or digital. You can always have a camera on you and have time to shoot. I just wonder how you have time to sort through hundreds of digital photos but don't have time to mail a few rolls of film out once a month? Our photos of family are gonna be most valuable in the future so do we really NEED to see them right this second? For commercial and paid shit digital is certainly the best route. For photos that matter to YOU film is the safest bet.

    • @slater1949
      @slater1949 Před 6 lety

      The Cantrell Project Hello, I just read your old comment and I wanted to ask, since you have a family, what you shoot your kids with? In other words, your important family photos are shot with digital or film? Do you carry both always? Thanks!

    • @the92project
      @the92project Před 6 lety

      Marvin S. i use film and digital in the warmer months (portra , ektar) and digital mostly in the winter, with a little bit of film home indoors (trix at 1600)

    • @skymedic48
      @skymedic48 Před 5 lety +2

      You should be taking time with digital too. Otherwise, you end up taking a bunch of shitty photos, that you have take TIME fixing in lightroom or photoshop. I have a job where I'm gone 24 hrs on shift, 10 shifts a month. I have a family, and multiple other responsibilities and still manage to carve an hour out a couple times a month to shoot film. it's all about choices.

    • @Homelessuser3351
      @Homelessuser3351 Před 2 lety

      @@skymedic48 get fujifilm camera then, lol...

  • @cwbaldwin61
    @cwbaldwin61 Před 7 lety +1

    Found your feed recently while researching the Minolta X700. Great channel you have here and you are "bang on" with this particular edition. The figures don't lie - shooting film IS cheaper in all respects and the results aren't "digital bits" which are inevitably lost but something tangible - right out the gate. I'm an engineer and can tell you that takes a lot of attention, effort, and know-how to continually execute a sound file management plan. The continual evolution of technology makes it VERY difficult and I know few people who do it well. The "average Joe", well - it's above their head, so the loss of these images is inevitable. And even if you do it right - one CANNOT pass these images down to the family. I know you only touched on it lightly, but there is an aspect of film I truly enjoy (I bulk roll & develop, and am building a darkroom); it is the organic pleasure of film, the reward of seeing contrast on a roll fresh out of the can! Digital can't touch it. Thanks for a terrific post.

  • @echtvergoldet
    @echtvergoldet Před 7 lety +2

    You don't even factor in that the 4k $ for the Hasselblad in 1989 were way more worth than today.

  • @dougs1723
    @dougs1723 Před 7 lety

    Love your channel! After watching several videos I purchased a Nikon F100 and a Nikkor 50mm pancake 1.8 for less than $250. Shot and developed my first roll of Acros (of my Grandchildren) and all I can say is WOW. The photos are beautiful with a quality I couldn't get from digital. Thanks for the inspiration and the best thing is my daughter has the negatives of her babies that will last forever.

  • @impugkee3244
    @impugkee3244 Před 7 lety +1

    Congratulation for your new camera !! I am very glad that you buy it because of us.

  • @777millertime777
    @777millertime777 Před 7 lety +3

    Love it man.
    After my first entry level film SLR I bought a leica M6 which I eventually traded for an XPAN kit, then for a Hasselblad 500cm kit, then for a Mamiya 6 kit, and now I'm trading back to my M6 because I miss it. All the trades were straight deals so I've spent nothing since the original purchase of the leica and have been able to shoot and use some of the best cameras ever made.
    I mostly shoot bulk-rolled black and white and develop and scan all my B&W, C41, and have the chemistry for E6 so my consumable cost has been pennies per roll of film.
    Meanwhile my D7100 I bought new sits on the shelf and loses more and more value everyday

    • @ForesthillFilmLab
      @ForesthillFilmLab  Před 7 lety +4

      777millertime777 you're fuckin killing it. It's hard for me to tell people "just develop it all yourself" but that's what I do and it virtually costs me nothing to shoot film haha it's the best! Camera trades are awesome!

  • @averykerr3328
    @averykerr3328 Před 6 lety +19

    I would respect this video more if the actual owner of this channel would regard their audience with higher esteem. The replies are condescending and the content irrelevant to the arguments.
    Like others viewing this video, I am curious to see success stories or failures of film and/or digital to better gauge which is right for me. Personally, after seeing 48 items in my cart on B&h, when buying the items needed for my personal film setup at home, I became a little discouraged of the many components needed for film and the actual time spent rolling film, shooting, processing, developing, scanning, editing, etc vs. digital. Doing it all yourself in the darkroom, to reduce costs, may work well for some people in photography, but it is a lot of time spent to consider.
    Anyways, please respect others who spent the time to click your video.

    • @DethronerX
      @DethronerX Před 3 lety +1

      Thats true, but youre also sacrificing some results you get on film. If your subject is strong then every second and dime spent will be bought back. Hard work pays off, if it goes perfect with your idea. If you're shooting a movie about a lost VHS camera, you can't shoot it on digital or film, both mediums are wrong, so you buy the VHS camera the movie is about and not try to look for cheap alternatives to achieve that look, which you can only do, if you totally have no money, but also remember, to achieve those looks, you have to actually Buy the software, like After Effects, Premier, DaVinci Resolve, FilmConvert and so on and not download free torrents, which is theft? So basically, a lot of cheap alternatives are achieved with stolen software, that we all do. Even my windows is cracked, because in our country, we dont have a single shop i found with an original windows flash drive, no one has it. The computer shops are installing cracked software.
      So, you have to spend in both, the only thing the people are afraid of, is the whole hassle of developing, scanning and not knowing how its going to turn out, because digital makes it easy for you to see the results right away, but that has also made us work less, like in films, your actors dont need to be too prepared, because you're not losing any film, but with a film camera, your performances have to be 100% because every frame is being lost. This is the main reason we have lost quality in digital art, although some of the digital works are beautiful and thats where digital is used the right way and not as an easy way out and a quick buck making business

    • @dmacrolens
      @dmacrolens Před 2 lety

      Yawn.

  • @darrenbutler1765
    @darrenbutler1765 Před 7 lety +34

    I am the biggest film geek alive and this simply isn't true. I have done everything I can to minimise my per frame cost. I process my own black and white film, Scan my own film and I spend at least $2000 a year on film and processing.

    • @ForesthillFilmLab
      @ForesthillFilmLab  Před 7 lety +9

      wow thats so freaking awesome.....you may spend $2000 a year on film and processing but so is the next guy and i know he doesn't have as many negatives in his binder as you do. i probably spend the same but i am actually paying for SOMETHING something i can point at and say "those are my photos thats why I'm broke" hahaha

    • @Raevenswood
      @Raevenswood Před 5 lety +15

      ​@@ForesthillFilmLab I totally agree ... in the end those hard drives fail, get lost, mislabeled, reformatted, images get lost in there and there is no reason of nostalgia to go digging through a data base to take a trip down memory lane. opening up a photo album with your negative sleeves and proof sheets and your final prints you made with your hands is priceless.

    • @erikhall1146
      @erikhall1146 Před 4 lety

      @@ForesthillFilmLab And i payed 750€ and dont need to spend any money anymore.

    • @johnrflinn
      @johnrflinn Před 4 lety +1

      @@Raevenswood Remember the state of the art 250 mb zip drive? The nature of electronics is planned obsolescence. I still take my 100 year old 5x7 cameras on hikes and get negatives that be printed up to 40 x 60 inches at 300 dpi or a 5x7 contact print. The negatives will last 100 years with or without an emp. There will always be scanners 100 years from now but the memory devices will have changed drastically. When I go on a hike people stop and ask to take pictures of my vintage cameras they find to be so beautifully made.

    • @billbadger9479
      @billbadger9479 Před 4 lety +5

      With film, you only pay for what you use.
      You can spend $2000 a year for development. Or you can just spend $500 and you'll produce pictures either way.
      With digital, there's just so much BS. Storage for example, you're going to have to spend like $50 for a class 10 8GB or so SD card. You can't spend any less if you want reliability. Then you'd better have a PC already or an external harddisk to store it so you can re-use your SD card. Or you can print them but you're going to need a printer and a computer(again, and this doesn't include the cost for papers and inks). Now if you're going to post-process your own image, you'll need a powerful PC and a good screen that can reproduce your photos accurately and they're costly. Worse, all these hardware are going to get obsolete very soon.
      Now I get that these hardwares are all multi-purpose tools so in the big picture, they're probably not that expensive. But imagine if you can ignore all that BS and spend the cash for dedicated photography equipments. You can get some great cameras, fantastic lenses, multiple studio strobes/speedlights, light modifiers, professional light meter, backdrops, tripods, monopods, straps, all sort of filters you can imagine etc for that amount of money. Even better, these won't get obsolete and will last you for a long time if you use them responsibly.

  • @turdboman
    @turdboman Před 6 lety

    Hey, I love you show, I was wondering if Fuji c 200 film that has an expiration date of 8/17 is worth getting very cheap ??

  • @rustyhands8179
    @rustyhands8179 Před 7 lety +2

    Would be great to see a video on buying a film scanner for 35 and 120

  • @majid158
    @majid158 Před 7 lety

    What scanner do you recommend to scan 120 film. If you already touched on this apologies, and would love the link.

  • @clarksetters
    @clarksetters Před 3 lety +1

    I am new to you and I am glad i found you. Do you have a list of the supplies you need to do black and white developing?

  • @FunnyIronicDancer
    @FunnyIronicDancer Před 4 lety +5

    Uhmmm i bought my canon eos 100D including 2 lenses for 170€ on ebay and have been shooting on it for 1.5 years, about 3000 images. Ive been shooting film on my grandpas olympus om2 for 6 months now and have already spent more on film and developing than on the canon (mind you i am scanning at home).
    There are soooo many weird assumptions about shooting digital in this video, I dont know a single amateur photographer who upgrades gear every year for example.

  • @ogslayer
    @ogslayer Před 5 lety +2

    My Grandfather smoked his whole life. I was about 10 years old when my mother said to him, 'If you ever want to see your grandchildren graduate, you have to stop immediately.'. Tears welled up in his eyes when he realized what exactly was at stake. He gave it up immediately. Three years later he died of lung cancer. It was really sad and destroyed me. My mother said to me- 'Don't ever smoke. Please don't put your family through what your Grandfather put us through." I agreed. At 28, I have never touched a cigarette. I must say, I feel a very slight sense of regret for never having done it, because your video gave me cancer anyway.

    • @johnrflinn
      @johnrflinn Před 4 lety +1

      If it's brain cancer it is probably the cell phone you are holding up to your ear for 3 hours a day. I love to hear different viewpoints and I am not going to blame my trick knee on any of the contributors.

  • @vinyljunkie64
    @vinyljunkie64 Před 7 lety

    great video & channel! I started with film long ago. Got into digital, but it soon left me very cold. Now back to film and having same fun I had as a teenager

  • @erinmontoya1128
    @erinmontoya1128 Před 4 lety

    This video and your other one about why you should shoot film convinced me to use film for the photos I care about. My family lost around 5000 files (over 10 years worth) on a back up hard drive. We plugged it into an extension cord and it fried the hardware. We had a lot of important photos there, my first baptism, some of the last photos of my late grandmother, and tons of family trips and memories we'll never get to see again because our hardware couldn't handle a little bit more voltage.

    • @teresashinkansen9402
      @teresashinkansen9402 Před 10 měsíci

      A sad fact, many people do not really think about backing their files. My friend lost his grandpa's memories, lost many hundreds if not thousands of pictures in negatives, almost a lifetime in a fire. Same shit happens, in fact digital enables you to do exact copies and so you can have perfect back ups. Ill recommend to do the same with your analog, make copies and store them in different locations, with digital do back ups in drives or disks and store them in different places as well, also you can use cloud services. Always have redundancy regardless if digital or analog!

  • @andrewwalmsley2314
    @andrewwalmsley2314 Před 7 lety +1

    dude, love your videos and your knowledge. I'm currently doing a shoot film for 180 days to see how i get on. My concerns are always the same, developing myself and scanning. Tried deveoping once and made a mess, im so conscious about wasting my my time on shots. I have no way of scanning and no money 2buy something quality, tried using my dslr but lens are not macro enough.

  • @69_MK
    @69_MK Před 5 lety +10

    What if you shot jpeg and took the sd card to your local shop to get printed on the same day???

    • @tomwd.2825
      @tomwd.2825 Před 5 lety +1

      Exactly

    • @davidwarren7279
      @davidwarren7279 Před 4 lety +1

      I'm pretty sure printing's pretty cheap!

    • @vikmanphotography7984
      @vikmanphotography7984 Před 4 lety +1

      @@davidwarren7279 printing small is really really cheap if you don't mind the weird color shifts of cheap printing services. (Walgreens/Sam's/CVS don't calibrate their printers ever but honestly, starting it in film color film printing, they'll still do better than you.)

  • @SteveLaMotteoc
    @SteveLaMotteoc Před 6 lety

    Can you give me the link for the film you bought. Do you have a suggestion on where to get cheap tri-x film

  • @prosperity-gospel
    @prosperity-gospel Před 5 lety +17

    This looks like a divisive subject. I just started getting into film photography, so I have a good idea of what it costs in 2018. These were my approximate costs.
    Up front costs of a used film camera and simple at-home development tools:
    Cheap film camera + 50mm lens (Pentax k1000) $100
    Cheap negative scanner $200
    Changing bag, development tank, & accessories $100
    Cheap water bath temp regulator $100
    TOTAL: $500
    On-going costs per 20 rolls:
    20 rolls of Portra 400 $160
    2L worth of c-41 chemistry $50
    Negative sleeves/binder $50 BUT is enough for 100 rolls so we'll say $10 per 20 rolls
    TOTAL: $220 for 720 shots (or approximately $0.30 a shot)
    This is all to get to the same workflow endpoint as a digital camera, where you have taken a shot and have it saved as a digital file. I think it's clear that digital would be cheaper for the same entry level equipment (say a Nikon D3500 for $600) with almost no ongoing costs. I choose analog because I don't have to do it for a job, so the extra time spent developing and the extra care taken to make each shot count is just bonus time that I get to fiddle with a new hobby. Also, I enjoy science and it's more interesting to me to be able to see chemistry working in a hands-on sort of way instead of behind a computer screen.
    My point of saying all of that is this: film photography is great for a whole lot of reasons, and can certainly be affordable enough. BUT, there's no reason to pretend like it's so much cheaper than digital, when it really clearly is not given any kind of fair comparison. There's a reason that #staybrokeshootfilm is a really popular hashtag on photography social media (2m+ uses on instagram).

  • @ConanTroutman0
    @ConanTroutman0 Před 7 lety +3

    I guess my main point of disagreement would be developing/scanning. Depending on where you live it can add up incredibly quickly. I live in Canada and for a 36exp roll of 35mm I'm looking at ~$25/roll before prints after everything's said and done since I don't have any local options for developing. It could be much cheaper if I developed on my own but then I'm having to make more upfront investments into a scanner and developing gear/chemicals plus the time I'm having to commit to developing them myself.
    Not disagreeing entirely though, I prefer film personally, but I think the cost argument may depend on some additional factors and how much effort you're comfortable putting in to get a finished product. I also think it can vary whether you're shooting photos at the volume of a working professional who's also making money off their gear vs the volume of shooting and lack of ROI you would expect from a hobbyist.
    Great video though!

  • @willapanews9761
    @willapanews9761 Před 3 lety

    I taught myself how to manually set camera settings with digital camera and various CZcams videos. I now feel comfortable enough with my skills to try and shoot with film and get a reasonable amount of good photos in a roll of film while shooting manually. Instead of viewing film and digital as adversarial ways of making photos I look at each as tools that if used with skill and combined can make each other better. For instance I like using vintage film camera lenses on my digital camera and you use a digital scanner for your film photography and a digital camera to make your videos. You can also get an attachment for your lens to use your digital camera to make digital files of your slides. I am interested in using both film and digital and think it is a waste of time to hate on one or the other.

  • @mannolitto2196
    @mannolitto2196 Před 7 lety +1

    Glad you're back I almost unsubscribed after your long inactivity. I agree film will always be with me.

  • @krazyspartanodst
    @krazyspartanodst Před 6 lety +1

    I'm confused, i just want to shoot photos as a hobby, having fun with it, I'm new to this and I don't know if film or digital would best suit me, it's kinda discouraging

  • @danijelisic3520
    @danijelisic3520 Před 4 lety

    DO YOU LIKE A CONTAX 645 MIDIUM FORMAT CAMERA, WHAT YOU THINK ABAUT.

  • @gaijinguide9017
    @gaijinguide9017 Před 6 lety +1

    Interesting perspective. Thanks for sharing!

  • @AnNguyen-yw9jm
    @AnNguyen-yw9jm Před 6 lety

    Hello I'm new to film photography, and photography in general. I was wondering if you can share your process of uploading the photos you took on a film camera onto social media like Instagram? Thank you!

  • @60lbackpack52
    @60lbackpack52 Před 7 lety +1

    what if you buy a Leica M6 and Leica lens?

  • @justk9775
    @justk9775 Před 7 lety

    Note to TRAVIS .....Embrace Change! Nothing stay the same. Change creates energy and excitement. Be inspired by both the challenge and the possibilities that change brings. The better and faster we are at adapting to change, the strong and more successful we become as a people. Digital awaits you Travis!

  • @vernonhensley4122
    @vernonhensley4122 Před 7 lety

    I have been watching your vids on youtube for a few weeks now and I'm glad I did ... I like your presentation and have speent a good deal of time thinking over the concepts you present .... thank you ... back into film .. Vern

  • @Mr2vivid
    @Mr2vivid Před 6 lety +1

    Thank god for this video.... i just traded in my 5D mk iv for 240 disposable cameras

    • @teresashinkansen9402
      @teresashinkansen9402 Před 6 lety +1

      Now you are a real photographer and you can touch your photos! (careful, avoid light exposure and humidity the image on the film deteriorates just by touching it) isnt that awesome?

  • @kirillpopov8032
    @kirillpopov8032 Před 7 lety

    your logic sounds very reasonable! btw, which archival sleeves are you using for each film format? keep up with your passionate approach ;)

  • @ArthurSadowsky
    @ArthurSadowsky Před 7 lety +1

    Hey, Travis, please don't listen to anybody - and please keep up doing your very talented work! Good luck to you, brother!

    • @ForesthillFilmLab
      @ForesthillFilmLab  Před 7 lety +1

      Arthur Sadowsky thank you so much! Don't worry these digital guys won't soften me up! I'm here for the real photographers!

    • @ArthurSadowsky
      @ArthurSadowsky Před 7 lety +1

      Also, your vids are just super - all works great, the format, the B&W presentation, the casual noise on the back of the audio track. All just works! I truly enjoy your channel!

  • @user-mf6ee2yf7i
    @user-mf6ee2yf7i Před 7 lety +1

    Totally agree. I have bought a Nikon FG-20 with 50mm f1.8 lens set from amazon just spent about 160 dollars.

  • @billbradleymusic
    @billbradleymusic Před 7 lety

    Absolutely yes! Thank you for your insight. I see your points very clearly. The main point being shoot film for what you care about. Digital being that throw away stuff society is drawn to.

  • @derekcrook3723
    @derekcrook3723 Před 2 lety

    You should open a film camera on line store . You would be able sell me one except I used to shoot film back in the 70's and the downside to film is still engrained in my mind . Now if you could preview your shots somehow in camera and shoot over the same roll ..some kind of delete function built into it then I think that is how and why digital photography was invented . You are totally right when it comes to cost and the fact that with digital you only have files . But taking a photo and sending it anywhere in the world to millions of viewers can never be matched by prints in a photo album. I have stacks of photo albums that i might look at once every 20 years . The last thing I think anyone wants is stacking more albums into an already crowded storage space . Love your enthusiasm and I hope you learn and enjoy the benifits of digital photography as much as I for one do !

  • @pierrickbramberger4206

    Where do you buy films? The lowest price I have found was 6 euro. (I'm from Austria/Europe)

  • @guillermolastra
    @guillermolastra Před 7 lety +1

    I love this video , thanks!!!!

  • @ikey5941
    @ikey5941 Před 7 lety +1

    Can you possiby do a video on pushing and pulling B & W, And the developing proccess?

    • @ForesthillFilmLab
      @ForesthillFilmLab  Před 7 lety

      Ike Smith yea I'll work on that I've been wanting too for a while now!

  • @robiulahmed
    @robiulahmed Před 7 lety +7

    Well, if you assume someone isn't savvy enough to buy a used digital camera, then they're sure as hell not savvy enough to buy a used film camera. Nikon and Leica will sell you brand new film cameras for thousands of dollars.
    Then of course, one film camera isn't enough. This guy on the internet has a Hassleblad, so you have to get a Hasselblad..

    • @johnrflinn
      @johnrflinn Před 4 lety

      The best all manual 35mm camera in my opinion is the Nikon FM2n. The cost for a decent body is about $250 used. The best deal for a medium format camera is the Mamiya Press Super 23 with the 100mm F 2.8 lens and the 6x9 back. Cost about $500. The Mamiya Press backs are famous for their flat film holding. Having a vintage camera is a great way to meet people. Total strangers come up to you and ask you about your camera and take pictures of it with their digital cameras. This is especially apparent when you have a camera from the early 1900's or the folders from the 30's.

  • @zaxmaxlax
    @zaxmaxlax Před 7 lety

    Can you make more videos about your frankenstax camera? I've just bought a 636 polaroid and surprisingly it's working.

    • @ForesthillFilmLab
      @ForesthillFilmLab  Před 7 lety

      zaxmaxlax I'm not sure what else you'd like to know about it? Anything in particular?

    • @zaxmaxlax
      @zaxmaxlax Před 7 lety

      Like how you did to adjust the rangefinder or made the lens to focus on the film plane. Are you going to make a mk2 version?

  • @steveg8322
    @steveg8322 Před 7 lety +1

    New models in film cameras were continually coming out back in the day also.Business needs something to sell all the time to remain in business.The hope is the new model has enough improvements to make its purchase worthwhile.Labors of love are rarely cost effective.

  • @kirilltigai2521
    @kirilltigai2521 Před 7 lety +2

    nice thoughts. can you recommend very cheap scanner for 35mm film?

    • @eliasrenner555
      @eliasrenner555 Před 7 lety +3

      I recently started shooting film and after some research i found the Canon 9000f Mark II to be the best scanner for the price. All my photos were shot with a Rollei 35SE and scanned with the Canon 9000f Mark II: www.flickr.com/photos/151733714@N04/

    • @kirilltigai2521
      @kirilltigai2521 Před 7 lety

      Thank's

  • @anonanon7822
    @anonanon7822 Před 11 měsíci

    Sadly Travis abandoned his channel but i’m still going there from time to time as it was one of the channels that inspired me to go almost full analog. Watching this in 2023 after all the film price climbs are kinda fun, but bulk loaded fomapan is still like 2-4 eur per roll, vision3 isn’t much more pricier(6-7), and ektachrome is for special occasions. I also started shooting polaroids, sx70 became my “medium format camera”. 20 for 8 shot pack may seem like a lot but it’s actually not that much more expensive (maybe cheaper) than 120 velvia/provia/ektar with dev and scans and prints and slide mounts. And i love polaroid colors and dreamy look for my landscape and nature photography. And modern polaroid became amazingly good, i guess we’re close to og 2000s polaroid quality levels

  • @mnchaser
    @mnchaser Před 7 lety +17

    Always love this argument, but it's a bit like comparing someone who plants their own garden vs. someone that shops at Costco. Is the person that shops at Costco denying the fact that his/her food (potentially) costs more? Nope, it's about the convenience for them.
    The comparison should be measured as "total cost per keeper image as a function of time and expertise desired by the photographer". That way each person can apply his/her own shooting style and justify what is best for them. On my 4x5, I keep 99.9% of the exposures I take. However, it has a massive learning curve. I slow down and make the best exposure I can each time. 2 hrs = 1 photo. Could I do the same on digital?? Absolutely!
    I enjoy the process of making something through the analog process. Others appreciate convenience of sharing photos with family and could care less about their camera every leaving Program mode.

  • @lamap45
    @lamap45 Před 7 lety +2

    I share your entusiam for film photography, but at least here in Portugal, film photography is much more expensive.

  • @r.a.8590
    @r.a.8590 Před 5 lety +1

    That Pentax Spotmatic camera is a dope camera for the price !!! Damn. Anyway, I only shoot film but for me it has nothing to do with spending or saving money; I much prefer the experience over digital photography. However, if I were a working professional photographer, I would likely own a digital camera as well.

  • @gurugamer8632
    @gurugamer8632 Před 2 lety

    If you could have for free Leica MP film or Leica M11 which one would you have?

  • @MrPaladin123
    @MrPaladin123 Před 7 lety

    where are you located? there's a 'forest hills' in queens ny.....intellectual curiosity....

  • @martinslattery2363
    @martinslattery2363 Před 6 lety +1

    You speak about the whole process. The negative is the real key. Buying used manual lenses is almost as expensive as af. equivalents.

  • @walterlodzinski6847
    @walterlodzinski6847 Před 5 lety +28

    Man this was tough to watch lol...you made a lot of assumptions about the way people use digital equipment.

    • @vikmanphotography7984
      @vikmanphotography7984 Před 4 lety +3

      Ikr.... It's called "buy an older digital camera". A person starting in film photography shouldn't go out and buy a brand new digital Canon R or a brand new film Nikon F6.
      You could just as easily buy a 5D original for $200 and a yonguno 50mm 1.8 for $45. Throw in a spare battery and an SD card and your looking at less than $300 total. That's the same cost as a free camera that you could probably get from a family friend and 15 rolls of Portra+ developing before you've even scanned anything.

    • @frankanderson5012
      @frankanderson5012 Před 4 lety

      @@vikmanphotography7984 You could buy a 13 year old 5D for $200 but then there's the reality which you missed out.
      A camera that old is likely not to be in particularly good condition, if nothing else the shutter is likely to be about to die. And how long will it be before it does die or the person decides they want something better - THAT'S when it starts. Most film camera's are on a level playing film and it's down to the film. Digital cameras are at the whim of technology. How many people are still using old digital cameras of more than even 5 years?

    • @vikmanphotography7984
      @vikmanphotography7984 Před 4 lety +1

      @@frankanderson5012 the shutter on your average original 5D is probably about the same as the average F3 for example... Tbh, the 5D might be a little better off, just because newer shutters have longer life spans.
      There aren't a ton of people using old digital cameras (who frequently use their cameras at least) but there also aren't a ton who use film cameras. If someone is content with a 35 year old film camera, they're probably be fine with a 10 year old digital camera (so long as the analog/digital debate isn't their hangup)

    • @adamstreetboyzz
      @adamstreetboyzz Před 3 lety +1

      Very true. My first camer was a Sony A6000 for $505 and bought Minolta 50mm 1.8 to adapt to it. For $40

  • @brianmccutcheon3205
    @brianmccutcheon3205 Před 11 měsíci

    I have downloaded all your video, well I think all of them. Miss you my friend, always enjoyed your videos. Hope life is treating you well.

  • @ShahShaha
    @ShahShaha Před 7 lety +2

    Thank you for all your videos so far! I've really enjoyed them. I've been shooting film for 6 years now and I think it's time to develop films on my own (started a new job where there's no lab around and thought that buying chemicals would be costly but you proved me wrong). I was wondering if you could explain the relation between film ISO and developing time? You've posted a video already on how to develop film but I'm not sure how to go about developing films with a higher or lower ISO.

    • @ForesthillFilmLab
      @ForesthillFilmLab  Před 7 lety +2

      Shah Shaha awesome! I'm on it I'll make something soon!

    • @ShahShaha
      @ShahShaha Před 7 lety

      Great thank you! Looking forward to it!

  • @Mr0neShotAway
    @Mr0neShotAway Před 7 lety

    Is is hard to develop C41 at home?

  • @Liv2Pnt
    @Liv2Pnt Před 6 lety

    Super excited to learn my camera! It's a Canon FT QL that my uncle had in Vietnam. Just picked up a used enlarger today for $25 (missing a lens, but easily replaceable), and have been learning to develop film using caffenol. Such a fun adventure!!

    • @johnrflinn
      @johnrflinn Před 4 lety

      The Canon FT QL is a great camera because it is totally manual, can run without batteries, is easy to load and is one of the few cameras that has mirror lockup for reduced vibration when using a telephoto lens on a tripod. A great portrait and macro lens to use with it is the Tamron 90mm F2.5 model 52B with the Canon mount. Canon also makes a nice 24mm wide angle lens for it.

  • @bingsby
    @bingsby Před 7 lety

    Hi Travis,
    Another thing that I have noticed which may also impact the digital costs is that digital shooters appear to have, say 5 different 50mm lenses and maybe a number of 35's and other focal lengths in various numbers as well. This would appear to be so that they can get a different look on the same sensor. Film shooters just choose a different film which is much cheaper and do not need a 1/2 dozen different lenses to get a different look. Just my thoughts on this. I am having a dedicated darkroom built which should be up and running in a few weeks so I am a somewhat biased to film shooter. My main reason is definitely the physical negative/slide first and second film just looks better.

  • @ScottyO79
    @ScottyO79 Před 6 lety +1

    Don’t forget to buy memory cards to write your photos to, and a way to store them, and a way to view your images.

  • @oceandrew
    @oceandrew Před 6 lety +20

    What nonsense. That JOBO you got back behind you costs $3000 new and that's only to develop film, the Saunders enlarger is another $5000 + (new). The space for the darkroom can cost you $1-$30 /sq.ft./month depending on location and the set up for the darkroom can cost you several thousands too, again depending on where and how much you can do yourself.
    Yeah it's easy to trash digital when you're a dedicated film shooter but don't pretend to be unbiased or able to give a fair and balanced appraisal which is what I thought this was going to be.

    • @oliverhancock2240
      @oliverhancock2240 Před 6 lety

      you say this yet for me (i live in England) it can either cost me £3 per roll to have it developed or £119 for a full darkroom including the first batch of chemicals. that's including chemicals, thermometers, developing tank, measuring cylinder, heck it even includes clips to hold to film, when you can use a bloody paper clip. whilst yes if you want an incredible, top end developing dark room it will cost a lot, but so will buying a top end computer, a top end digital medium format along with the obscene cost of high-end autofocus lenses.

    • @soxrox4093
      @soxrox4093 Před 5 lety +2

      If taking film photos is fun , than by all means , use film cameras. But don't tell me it's cheaper than digital. I recently bought an almost brand new Nikon d3200 for 150 usd on eBay. Similar quality film cameras cost more. Used digital cameras can be just as cheap as film cameras. This whole video doesn't make sense. Billions of people who use digital can't be wrong.

    • @soxrox4093
      @soxrox4093 Před 5 lety +2

      @Isaac Dweck Doesn't really matter what you or I think. 35mm film photography will soon be totally dead. New cameras and parts are not manufactured anymore. The people who fixes them or used them will die out soon. Films are becoming more and more expensive. Even now refurbished ,tested film cameras cost hundreds of dollars. They are not cheap.
      If you love the film colors and the bigger format, you will have to go for medium or large format film photography. That make sense. Expensive but it's fun. But 35 mm? No way. I still have my old 35 mm film prints. It's crap. Even a cellphone camera does better.

    • @soxrox4093
      @soxrox4093 Před 5 lety +2

      @Isaac Dweck Back in the days I had an olympus trip 35 film camera. I loved it. It was a great camera. Reliable, simple, no battery was needed.
      I stil got it somewhere. I shot hundreds of family photos with it but the truth is that I never needed to print them larger than 5-7 imches. In these days, even a cheap 5 mp phone camera gives at least same or better quality pictures at this print size.
      Sorry.
      For 99 percent of the people of this planet 35mm film photography is dead!!!!!! And will stay dead for forever except maybe a few weirdos.
      Sorry. I cant be nicer than this. You have to face the truth soon or later.
      Thank you.

    • @johnrflinn
      @johnrflinn Před 4 lety

      Bought my Omega 4x5 enlarger for $120 and the trays and accessories for another $100. The 135mm and the 90mm El Nikkor lenses another $180. I use my bathroom as a darkroom. No real drain to the savings account.

  • @davidrehor768
    @davidrehor768 Před 6 lety

    Bang on Travis! Thank you for your posts! I started shooting in the '90's with film and my success rate of creating great images was the same as with the digital era, with one clear difference: I could afford it then and now I'm broke. One truth about 21st century gigs, the client has no patience! Thus why we are forced to use digital and the constant upgrades (nausea). But if you are an artisan and primarily shoot personal work, absolutely, film and darkroom all the way. There are amazing things you can do with pro digital, but it tends to be a rich man's game. I recently bought a Wista 4x5 technical camera with 3 German lenses for under $1K. Crazy. That camera is as good, if not better, than any digital one out there, with unique characteristics to boot (movements).
    But at the end of the day, it's all about the ability to create great images, and let's not get bogged down with the latest and greatest. That's what the manufacturers want you to do, without thinking.

  •  Před 7 lety

    Nice to see your again!

  • @johnpapandreou9613
    @johnpapandreou9613 Před 7 lety +1

    Hi Travis, Another outstanding video !!!! Good to see that you now have a pentaxWith regards to bargin film cameras you really can not loose $$$ can you.Look how cheap pro grade film cameras have become, you can even get a Nikon F5 for under $300 ($5000 when new)and have you looked at the price of a Pentax 645 .....that could be my next camera.
    Best Regards from down under
    Johnkpap

  • @stephenwhited1833
    @stephenwhited1833 Před 4 lety

    I agree with this. I just got an Agfa Optima II for $15.00 bought a roll of Ilford 125 B&W film shot it and developed it in Cinestill 96 one step developer and got magnificent negatives that scanned and printed very well. I have a digital but I love my film cameras because they force me to slow down and do it right the 1st time.

  • @ProSimex84
    @ProSimex84 Před 7 lety

    happy to see new videos coming out man, I always enjoy your work. If someone is savvy enough to buy a used film camera, logic suggests they would be savvy enough to buy a used DSLR. That being said, you arent going to walk into a goodwill and find a prosumer DSLR. With cell phones putting out 16+ megapixls, youre only buying a new digital camera for the gadget, and if you like gadgets there is nothing more gadgety then mechanical camera or a late model SLR.

  • @thelachster
    @thelachster Před 2 lety

    Scan them by yourself? How much does that scanner cost?

  • @j.gorenc1642
    @j.gorenc1642 Před 7 lety +1

    also we can back up digital files , or wait until you want to print

    • @nickfanzo
      @nickfanzo Před 4 lety

      J. gorenc you can keep negatives for decades. Film cameras are still used that are over 50 years old. Digital cameras would be obsolete and in landfills before 50 years.

  • @Guramaki
    @Guramaki Před 7 lety +2

    Great to hear that you will be putting out more videos. How about doing a video on the different types of color and monochrome film out there and which ones you prefer?

    • @cws_dp
      @cws_dp Před 7 lety

      Shannon Trainer also completely fucking untrue. Who are you? He literally used 10 rolls of Fuji 200 color film as an example in this video.

    • @cws_dp
      @cws_dp Před 7 lety +1

      do you have anything of value to say? or is this it?

  • @dennisgreene7164
    @dennisgreene7164 Před 5 lety

    Love it. V powerful statements that I am increasingly aligning to.

  • @PaulVanCaesbroeck
    @PaulVanCaesbroeck Před 7 lety

    Nice comparaison, but you forgot to add the cost of a computer when it comes to scanning. You can also ask the shop where you have your films developed to deliver the images on cd so you don't have to scan them.

  • @anthonypearson4056
    @anthonypearson4056 Před 5 lety +3

    I love digital, and I love film. And I print from both.
    I used to pay £1 for film from the pound shop and £2 to develop - special deal from my local photo shop, bless. Since the pound shop stopped stocking film I now have to pay around £2 for a roll of C200. So still only £4 a film all in. I use all sorts of film cameras, many of them costing only a few quid.
    So yes, film can be affordable. I shoot 3 or 4 rolls a month, on average. There is something wonderful about a physical negative that is the direct product of the light it collected in that time and place.
    But I also shoot between 500 and 1000 digital shots a month. Film is never going to be cheap enough for me to do that. And very often I'm using digital cameras to make images you just can't make with film. The large amounts of money I've paid for digital equipment seems like good value to me given the number of pics I take.
    So... film is good and can be cost effective. Digital is good and can be cost effective.
    If you have a passion for taking, processing and displaying images, both are great.
    www.dankspangle.com/

  • @charlesvail2443
    @charlesvail2443 Před 6 lety +1

    I've been shopping Ebay and good online used camera stores and found used Nikon and Pentax film camera bodies for under $20. Lenses add a speck more but getting newly started in film is dirt cheap these days. Relatives and friends often have unused film cameras also. Processing for B&W with a plastic tank and two chemicals is also super cheap and you can develop more negatives than I ever shot as a young photographer back in the 70's. The thing with digital (for art & pleasure) is that you tend to make more redundant images. I have at least 15,000 in my HD. In my film days I had maybe 1000 negatives max before turning pro. When you shoot film you slow down and do less "spray and pray" You become more like a sniper , shoot less and score more with your best images! I saw a meme recently..."120 roll film (6 great images), 35mm 36 exp. (6 great images) SD card 2000+ jpgs (6 great images) I've experienced this and I am getting back to enjoying shooting film and making fewer but hopefully better & more memorable images. -keep on truckin

  • @kameratiks
    @kameratiks Před 7 lety +1

    I've compared years ago the cost of per shot or image made from a digital and film. Yes, you can say it is costlier to use film. Just keep it simple and reasonable and in the long run cost would not matter anymore. I support the notion of film photography for a hobby or for the enthusiast and this is a good justification of the costs. The comparison can be flawed but it does not take away that it always boil down to a choice. Film is ours.

  • @richardazar22
    @richardazar22 Před 7 lety

    Great video Travis! Not to mention that there is no digital camera made, not even the $50,000 Phase One 100MP digital back that has as good of image quality or look that film has. Film just has a rich deep look while digital looks thin, at least to me it does.

  • @gianlusc
    @gianlusc Před 6 lety

    Awesome video. Just keep on going 😃👍

  • @sherm50599
    @sherm50599 Před 7 lety +1

    This is a great video! TY.

  • @lonniepaulson7031
    @lonniepaulson7031 Před 6 lety

    Yes, I have to agree with you. I started photography as a hobby in 1969. Now days digital is getting better so fast that you feel you have to buy the next camera that has replaced your recent DSLR. If you shoot professionally to compete with other pros you have to keep up to date with digital and the usual choice is full frame digital which for on the low end is about under $2500 for a body. If for your work you need the speed of fast action you may be spending over $5000 for a camera body. The lenses of full frame cameras cost more than the slower kit lenses of crop sensor cameras.
    You can also save money with 35mm film by bulk loading your own film. I used to bulk load both Ektachrome and black and white film. I have worked for a company that used several bulk loaders with various films. If you are shooting your own film I recommend processing your own film to save money. You then have full control over your images just like your RAW digital photos in Lightroom or Photoshop. I also recommend Epson flat bed scanners. You don't need a dedicated film scanner. Epsons are the best flat bet scanners for film you can buy. I have the V550 which I can scan medium format film on. Epson also makes flat bet scanners for 4x5." However, I just photograph my 4x5" negs and chromes on a LED light box with my digital camera and macro lens on a copy stand. HAVE FUN WITH FILM.

  • @monkelmann
    @monkelmann Před 5 lety

    bloody good video mate.

  • @cybermike-exe
    @cybermike-exe Před 7 lety

    fantastic!! i just swap from digital to film because of your video!! im selling my digital gear right now and i cant wait for your next video!!

    • @ForesthillFilmLab
      @ForesthillFilmLab  Před 7 lety

      mickael chenard add me on instagram if you've got any questions I'll be happy to help. @killindreams great to hear your enthusiasm

    • @cybermike-exe
      @cybermike-exe Před 7 lety

      im already following you and i'd love to keep contact as im working on a film project!! im currently shooting with a zorki-6, industar 61LD on fuji c200 with a leningrad 4 lightmeter, my whole kit cost me less then 100$ including a new carrying bag and its just soo fun!! after learning photography with digital i lost something that i loved in photography and i found it back with film, my whole childhood was shot on Agfa vista and film was a part of my life i missed!

  • @enigmabletchley6936
    @enigmabletchley6936 Před 6 lety

    Really enjoyed this video. The economics is debatable but for sheer enjoyment and satisfaction film can be great.

  • @ThatCanonGuysReviews
    @ThatCanonGuysReviews Před 5 lety

    $19 is a steal on that spotmatic lol with the 50mm F1.4 lens it would be around $150 on ebay in good shape. I don't agree with the video but it's your opinion:) I shoot professionally with a Canon 1Ds Mark II and 5dc. I also collect older digital camera and use them often for between $10-50 for DSLR cameras from the 00s-2010s. I bought my 1Ds mark II for $200 and 5dc for $75 and have shot over 150k photos in the last 5 years with no problems. Going to eventually upgrade but there are numerous great digital cameras that have hit their depreciation curve and just as many deals to be had. Getting a lot more into film lately and It's a different feel than digital and I love that.

  • @fdauerbach
    @fdauerbach Před 7 lety

    I have a Canon T5i and a I believe you are absolutely right. I've being shooting it for a little while and I already feel like I need to upgrade it. So I'm moving to a Minolta X-700 film camera ;)

  • @SaypheZonE
    @SaypheZonE Před 6 lety +1

    Shooting digital clearly demonstrates people's fascination with instant gratification and the idea of infinite. As a result, quality and the human touch tends to suffer. People spend less time correcting their mistakes and more time picking the best photo as opposed to taking the best photo.

    • @johnrflinn
      @johnrflinn Před 4 lety

      Reminds me of a quote from The Little Prince..."People start out in express trains, but they no longer know what they're looking for. Then they get all excited and rush around in circles"

  • @joshmvfx
    @joshmvfx Před 6 lety +1

    I hope they come out with an "alternate" to modern digital sensors so I can get a Red camera for a few hundred bucks

  • @mrbrent62
    @mrbrent62 Před 7 lety +1

    He makes some good points. Also the lens size makes a difference.... technology advances but you can't change the laws of physics. However as a wedding photographer.... I have to use a digital camera to stay in the game. I shoot well over 1000 shots per wedding and cull down to 350 to 500. I deal with a mostly under 35 age group who probably have never used film. Also the way a modern bride looks at her pictures is online, her phone, computer. Even high end wedding albums are digital.
    I like the look of old school film shots personally. Especially large format tin-type. It really depends of what type of photography you do as to using film or digital.

  • @jerrymoney1479
    @jerrymoney1479 Před 3 lety

    You are super right man bro.🤙Thanks for sharing this video.

  • @BriteFrog
    @BriteFrog Před 6 lety

    I agree with all your arguments...But where did you find a $150 Epson scanner?...That's the only piece of the puzzle I'm missing, and my scanning costs are nuts...I develop my own B&W (color to come soon) in 35mm & medium format, but decent scanners are $400 plus.

  • @jeffbell279
    @jeffbell279 Před 4 lety

    I love your passion

  • @BriteFrog
    @BriteFrog Před 6 lety

    Thanks, I will look into these models of scanners. I guess for me (and I consider myself a "hybrid" shooter, meaning I shoot digital with a crop sensor Nikon D3400, which I got used with 2 lenses for $300 (originally over double that price 3 years ago) for weddings where I know the client wants "instant" results) I feel like more of an artist when I control the creation of the image start to finish, and I feel I can only get that satisfaction from film. I have 4 35mm film cameras (all completely manual, except one), along with a RB67, and I can tell you if used correctly yield results (especially the medium format RB67) that far surpass digital.