Skip to content

Using film vs digital cameras, what’s your preference?

Making pictures with John Enman - Using film vs digital cameras, what’s your preference?

I was a bit surprised this past week when a couple loudly told me they preferred using film and doubted they would ever bother with digital.  They smiled knowingly while pronouncing digital as an inferior way of doing photography, and that those that used digital cameras couldn’t make good pictures without a computer.  Of course, I told them I disagreed, but I also had to say that they should use whatever makes them comfortable. I like black and white film and mentioned that also.

I find that many photographers who use film cameras instead of digital constantly make sure others know their choice, and like to offer a rationale for using film with statements as they did, and saying, “This camera has always taken very good pictures why would I change”.  I can’t argue with what seems to me a reasonable statement, however, in my opinion, the difference between digital and film is like driving a 1970’s car and the latest 2015 model car across Canada.

As with film, I really liked those old fuel-guzzling, muscle cars, but the smooth, inexpensive performance, the stylish comfort and the myriad of options available for the operator of the 2015 model car will make the experience safer and more relaxing than the 1970 version, just like using a digital camera does.

This couple were so emphatic about how great the pictures were that their film cameras produced that I naturally assumed they do their own darkroom work. But no, they take their film into a lab that processes it, then scans it to a computer, then with predetermined settings determined by a computer set up by some technician they get their prints. Hmmm…., not much photographer input there, and a lot more “digital technology” then I cared to mention. Oh well, at least they are taking pictures.

Later, I as I contemplated about when I used to shoot film I thought, there was something, to be said about the permanence, and how it demanded we get it right the first time.  There were no second chances, and if more than 36 exposures of some subject were needed there was that “dead in the water” moment while changing film, unless I had a second camera hanging around my neck.  Forethought was a required option; and with regard to multiple cameras, I can remember packing a bag with one body loaded with black and white film, another with colour film, and a third with slide film.

When referring to the time when we both earned a living as photographers using film, my friend Alex commented, “Oh, the days of click and pray.”  As I wrote, there are no second chances. Especially for a photographer that relies on a lab for processing and printing that roll of film.

I will say that shooting film certainly slows one down. Shooting a roll of film every now and then might be a good idea. One can easily pick up an old film camera and put a roll of film in it for less than a $100. Relying on a lab for colour processing might lift the cost much, but I have no doubt with a bit of searching we all could find someone with a home dark room to process a roll of black and white film. I don’t know if that is getting back to basics, as a photographer that I met called shooting film, nevertheless, it would be fun to use one of those heavy, old, shiny, metal cameras again.  And who knows, using film might become a regular way to, hmmm….get back to the basics of a time gone by.

These are my thoughts this week. Contact me at emcam@telus.net, 250-371-3069 or stop by Enman’s Camera at 423 Tranquille Road in Kamloops. I sell an interesting selection of used photographic equipment.