xxxRebeccaxxx
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- Rebecca
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Hiya would like your opinions on digital photography and how the digital process has affected the photography industry!! 
Have any of you used film?
Awww i know!! but the quality is amazing!! and i love the surprise of seeing ** negs for the first time!! digital just doesnt give u that effect!!
what do u prefer?
Have any of you used film?
Have any of you used film?
Yes. If it wasn't a pain in the arse to get on the computer (got to scan it first which means getting a scanner and I can't be faffed with that) and also the fact that you only have 36 on a roll and no review screen - I'd still use it. Given how many photographs I take it would begin to get expensive though, and I don't' fancy home developing either.
It isn't just that the quality from film is amazing - it is that the manu's have managed to get people to regularly pay lots of money for the quick fix of digital imaging by making incremental 'improvements' on otherwise dead-end equipment and market it in such a way that replacing the whole camera body regularly is considered normal!but the quality is amazing!!
It isn't just that the quality from film is amazing - it is that the manu's have managed to get people to regularly pay lots of money for the quick fix of digital imaging by making incremental 'improvements' on otherwise dead-end equipment and market it in such a way that replacing the whole camera body regularly is considered normal!
The 'revolution' was in the economic process as much as that of amateurs who can now 'instantly' bore people with their plethora of out of focus ideas with clipped highlights.
who p'd in your cornflakes this morning?Hiya would like your opinions on digital photography and how the digital process has affected the photography industry!!![]()
That's a large can of worms...
Indeed!! making it harder for professionals to make a living.....
The digital process has fundamentally altered the way the way in which professional photographers work - and it was always going to - but what amazes me is the way in which we have gone from 'improving' the image, from the slow grainy monotones created from the large, unwieldy cameras of early photography that slowly transformed into a system that allowed individuals to capture high quality colour images with (relativity) cheap equipment to digital with a pretty large increase in equipment cost and a loss of quality that has taken the best part of this millennium to get near to an acceptable level.I also shoot film for fun by the way, but there's no way on God's Earth I'd ever use it for a paying job today, not if you threatened to put pins in my eyes.
...With 'new' cameras (really only new sensors and software) we have people desperately looking at the resultant digital images in an attempt to show that they are 'better' than the last versions and 'worth' spending money on upgrading again (and again)...

Indeed!! making it harder for professionals to make a living as companys are saving alot of money via using websites such as (getty images) which allows them to pay amatuers reasonable prices for their images! sorry if i come across strong im in the middle of writing a essay for my ba hons lol![]()
I don't disagree. My wife has bought a D700 and so far the results look pretty impressive. Although we've yet to see if they match up to the quality of the 20x16 Cibachrome prints from 15+ year-old slides we have on our walls.I think we've reached a watershed in terms of equipment from a purely IQ perspective...
With the Nikon D3 and D3x and Canon equivalents (sorry 'other' manufacturers - you're not even close), we now have cameras that can under the right conditions, produce sharper images than most photographers need, either for hobbyist or professional use, bearing in mind the majority of images are destined for online use or for print use below A3 size.
Awww i know!! but the quality is amazing!! and i love the surprise of seeing ** negs for the first time!! digital just doesnt give u that effect!!
But it is not in the camera makers interest to sell kit that lasts for ages, better to sell cameras that age and are regularly replaced isn't it?
Interesting and pertinent point but not one that can be linked directly to the advent of digital technology. It's an abuse that spans much further than camera makers alone.
Manufacturers of all kinds, shapes and sizes implement tactics of cyclical consumption, i.e to make products that have shorter life cycles to maintain the flow of income and sustain company operation.
I agree that many 'prosumer' or entry level camera bodies often aren't much an an upgrade to their predecessors at all, the improvements being marginal or cosmetic at best.
The more high end spec bodies, Canon and Nikon all have a shutter mechanism that will fail after an approximate amount of actuations.
Camera lenses however could be excluded. If looked after can last a few decades and longer. Bodies, will eventually cease to operate.
Some say it's an abuse or exploitation of the monetary system, to consume huge amounts of dwindling resources to manufacture items that are not designed to stand the test of time and use.
It's more than likely that the technology exists to make products that would last far longer but as this is not a profitable tactic, what other options do we have?
The right 'Not to Buy'
Regards
You have that right but how is it an option if your livelihood is photography? or anything else for that matter?
Yes indeed but you have equipment now that will do a job that far exceeds anything 5 years ago. Say to the manufacturer No! I can do the job with what I have. Too simplistic?
This is no way an attempt in getting imformation to put into my essay btw! that would be stupid!! its purely a theory that im putting across to see what other people think! i do not believe i am in anyway one sided having used both the highest quality digital and film! its just my opinion on how it has changed the industry!
What is 'worse' is that they are probably designed to do just that.Even the more high end spec bodies, Canon and Nikon all have a shutter mechanism that will fail after an approximate amount of actuations.
Until a VR whatnot motor fails and the cost of repair is exorbitant.... They are thinking ahead you know.Camera lenses however could be excluded. If looked after can last a few decades and longer.
This is really the problem as I see it - and it is not restricted to photography but the acceleration of 'digital' has highlighted it. I fully expect that at some point the 'next generation' of kit from Canon and Nikon to be entirely divorced from what has gone before - so they can get people in the cycle all over again.Some say it's an abuse or exploitation of the monetary system, to consume huge amounts of dwindling resources to manufacture items that are not designed to stand the test of time and use.
It's more than likely that the technology exists to make products that would last far longer but as this is not a profitable tactic, what other options do we have?
What is 'worse' is that they are probably designed to do just that.
Until a VR whatnot motor fails and the cost of repair is exorbitant.... They are thinking ahead you know.![]()
This is really the problem as I see it - and it is not restricted to photography but the acceleration of 'digital' has highlighted it. I fully expect that at some point the 'next generation' of kit from Canon and Nikon to be entirely divorced from what has gone before - so they can get people in the cycle all over again.

I have an old T90 and some ER lenses unused right here... It is a good job the internet was not invented when Canon came up with that one!There'd be a revolution if Canon changed there mounting system again in the near future and if Nikon actually did release a medium format that looked like this:![]()
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... Or with Leica doing well with the M9 will Nikon recreate the S or Canon the 7?