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The dumb blonde in our local Boots always calls it 'Iford' for some reason?
Annoys the hell out of me too.
I now web order it.
What order online, and miss out on face to face contact with a Blonde
The dumb blonde in our local Boots always calls it 'Iford' for some reason?
Annoys the hell out of me too.
I now web order it.
I hear you. Digital is easy. For me the joy is in what I shoot, as in the subject. There's no challenge in digital... just far too easy. My next project will be film based... I'm almost certain.
If b/w film had never existed, would modern digital photographers be editing images this way? I'm sure that it would have been discovered as an effect, but would we see so much digital b/w?
As it happens, most of my printing is done using Ilford paper, although I have a feeling that Ilford's inkjet paper division is now unrelated to their film and silver printing paper arm.
A form of inverted boasting?I really ought to fire up one of my 4 film SLRs once in a while.
For whom do you take / make photographs?To be fair whose benefit is this for is it for the photographer, or for the owner of the photograph? Will the owner of the photograph notice any difference? If not, I suppose you could argue why bother with the effort of film, just simply shoot digital! Maybe it's for the benefit of the photographer, who enjoys using the film, and can see the difference![]()
Not so. Pay attention to the medium. It has different qualities, some of which are superior. Mainly, it's to do with image texture and its rendition of edges ...Its a nostalgia thing ...
I've never understood the point of film emulations. I've always thought precisely what the opening post says - if you want your photos to look like they were shot on film, just shoot them on film.
Fujifilm are big into film simulation modes on their cameras. Maybe Ilford are having a dig at their old rival.View attachment 45501Why emulate film when you can shoot film? If that's how you want your images to look, why fake it?
True. It might help to switch your camera into Monochrome mode if you want the discipline.It's sometimes too easy in the digital world to go snapping away and then think about converting the image to mono on the computer. If you have a mono film in the camera it makes you think more about the image making process.
Fujifilm are big into film simulation modes on their cameras. Maybe Ilford are having a dig at their old rival.
I too have kept my film cameras, but the big barrier is not owning a scanner or developing gear. And scanning services near me are very expensive. Shame.
However I don't live in the UK
There'll always be the requisite software to open and edit raw files, once the codec is out there, it's out there for goodThe other thing to think of is digital isn't future proof. There was an interesting article in one of the mags this month regarding the longevity of digital files, how storage medium and software may change over the years to the point that renders the raw files of today useless. Whereas my box of negs could be printed from long after they scatter me around the hills.