Are you good enough to get the results you want with film? No recourse to correcting RAW files with film.. you have to know what you're doing.
are you looking for a hornet's nest to poke with that stick?! No... I'm not. If the OP's post is genuine, it's something to be considered. Shooting film requires more exposure precision as there are far fewer things you can do to correct the exposure if you get it wrong. That's a fact.
No... I'm not. If the OP's post is genuine, it's something to be considered. Shooting film requires more exposure precision as there are far fewer things you can do to correct the exposure if you get it wrong. That's a fact.
Shooting film requires more exposure precision as there are far fewer things you can do to correct the exposure if you get it wrong. That's a fact.
The exposure latitude of print film allows for much better lazy photography than digital IMVHO.
As Pookeyhead says, 'there are far fewer things you can do to correct the exposure if you get it wrong. That's a fact'. Wanging a few sliders is somewhat quicker and more straightforward than trying to achieve the same aims in the darkroom.
But for the casual snapper it just means getting the exposure 'about right' and dropping off the film at the lab. Then back comes your perfectly exposed prints. Thereby feeding the myth that digital shooters mess about with their PP and film shooters never did.
I find with negative film there is more latitude for recovery of over or under exposure.
Slide film I'd say is more similar if anything to digital in terms of room for error.
I found this canon for exchange and i was wondering if its still worth going back to 35mm film? I cant afford buying a new one at the moment and i have what it takes to get it in exchange!
I'd say it was not worth it - save up and buy another digital SLR or go second hand. Film can be fun sometimes but its a step backwards IMHO
are you looking for a hornet's nest to poke with that stick?!
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is there an echo in ere..lol