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That's where the learned knowledge of the photographer came in; it certainly sorted the sheep from the goats in those days and it was a pretty quick learning curve. I used to do a bit of gig photography years ago and for colour work I'd use Kodak Ektar 1000 ISO and Fuji 1,600 ISO film. Quite often I'd be on f/4 or f/4.5 and 1/125 second and have to wait until the stage lighting was bright enough before taking a shot, and use any motion blur to enhance the shot.Just on the general ISO point. I sometimes wonder what's wrong where I live as even on a sunny day depending on where I stand and what I point my camera at I can be at ISO 800, 1,600 or 2,000 if I want some depth to my pictures and I'm only talking f8 here with a 35mm lens and as for indoor pictures, you can pretty much forget them if limited to ISO 400. Years back I used to take a lot of pictures indoors and with ISO 1.600 I could be limited to double digit shutter speeds with the subject movement blur that brings.
Maybe I'm spoilt these days but I'd hate to be limited to even ISO 1,600 and the choice of motion blur or not taking the picture or only taking one at f1.x.
I'd urge any digital users thinking of using film to check the exif info of their digital pictures and decide if film is a viable choice or if they'll be happy to be limited to taking only the shots when film isn't a limiting factor.
Jimmy Rogers
Joanne Shaw Taylor These days, with a full frame digital camera that has good low light capability, I think pretty much anyone could get some acceptable shots, if only by machine gunning and the law of average.
However, I think we're straying way off topic with this and the thread is in danger of going down the Digital versus Film rabbit hole- so let's avoid that and concentrate on the original discussion.



