digital shots started to seem disposable, inconsequential and dull to me. It was like they lacked a soul.
So I picked up my old 35mm cameras from the 70s and 80s, blew the dust off and have effectively revived my love of picture-taking.
I agree and have shot 35mm film since 1989 and got my first SLR in 1990.
When you shoot 100 ISO 35mm film the grain is so small that you can enlarge it to 16x20" and hardly see any grain. If you have a lens that allows for f/1.8 or f/1.4 it looks stunning and much better than a digital point and shoot or even a digital SLR costing $3K with a consumer lens f/3.5 or f/4.
It's all about the lenses. The SLR camera manufacturers have always been quiet about it when it comes to consumers because you can use a 51 year old Nikon F SLR and a 20 year old f/1.4 lens and your photos will look better than the person with the Nikon F6 (Nikon's last 35mm film camera) or even a Nikon D3s brand new DSLR using a consumer zoom lens f/3.5-4. When I say better I'm talking about bokeh and aesthetics and
not just overall sharpness.
I bought a Nikon N8008 SLR with motor drive for $90. used in 2008 when it originally came out it cost about $575 in 1991. It's pretty good and offers a number of features you don't get with a 50 year old SLR...kind of the best of both worlds when shooting 35mm film.
If you're talking 120 medium format film, then the digital equivalent prices in the range of a new car.
I agree. You don't need a medium format digital back on a Hasselblad. The 35mm sized cameras are totally adequate (with 100 ISO film) to print up to 20" or even a poster. Spend the extra money on great prime lenses.
And when you want to shoot black and white film the silver emulsion and how it's sensitive to different colors is something that can be simulated with plugins in Adobe Photoshop but not quite the same.
And yes technically color negative film that is overexposed offers more information available to scan for HDR (high dynamic range) photography but black and white film is a very stylized image immediately that you commit to when on-location shooting your photographs. It will always be black and white unless someone tones it or artificially adds color to it by (digitally) hand-painting it.
30 cents an image is still pretty cheap if you at least know the basics of photography.
a roll of film has always been the cheapest part of photography. If you shoot B&W you can buy in bulk (100ft roll), roll your own cannisters, develop it yourself and save even more money if you are really looking to save about $50.
Just try it, borrow a friend's 35mm SLR that they haven't touched in years and get some 100 ISO film and have fun.