Photography Stuff

2 thoughts on “Photography Stuff”

  1. Your observations on the difference between film and digital are quite interesting. Yes, because of the vast differences in what can be captured with say a 32 gig or 64 gig card vs. a 36 exposure roll of film does tend to open the door with digital and shooting almost carelessly with hopes that one of the many duplicate exposures will be good. I’ve been shooting pictures for a long time, film until 2007 when I finally got a digital camera, then it was still 60/40 for the first 2 years as I became more comfortable with the digital tools I carried both a digital body and film body with lenses for both in my camera backpack, then it swapped to 40/60, dwindling down to last year only shooting about 8 rolls of film. The big falloff came at the end of 2010, when Dwanye’s in Kansas City stopped the Kodachrome development, that was my baby, my favorite canvas, with it, some of my love affair with film died. Still this year, I have shot some black and white, some E-6 Fuji and resurrected Agfa, but mostly digital. In fact, digital and film no longer share bags, so when I go out to shoot film, I do it quite intentionally, not taking the digital. Funny thing is, I have one enlarger left (used to have 2), my film tanks, my trays, but haven’t had time to set up a darkroom in years, hoping that the time will come or I’ll make the time to start up again. My approach to digital though has changed over the last 3 years, looking to take more of a hybrid of my film and my digital technique. I will use the wonderful bracketing abilities of my digital tool to capture different variations of the light, but I’ve tried to become more focused on getting a good shot, not many OK shots hoping for one good one. I think it’s working, but I attended a workshop given by a pro wildlife photographer, and he used the high cache buffer of his pro Canon to its fullest trying to capture birds in flight and judging from what he showed our group, it works. Take a 1000 images, use 10 if he’s lucky.
    That’s not the kind of photography I do, but that’s the lesson, looking for what one enjoys to capture and to share, that’s the joy of photography. You looked a few of my images on my flickr photostream, for that I thank you, and wish you the best of luck shooting.

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