Everything is going digital anyway. 15years ago all there was were film, 15 years in the future all there will be is digital...I say move with the times and embrace it! Besides... You don't see cumputer courses using floppy disks because that's how it got started![]()
You do realise you are in the film section, right?![]()
Lol oops...on my tablet...didn't look! Forgive me people of the film realm![]()
We had a thread like this before where I stated that I think learning on digital is actually a good idea - allows you to learn about depth of field, aperture, shutter speed and general exposure without having to run through endless rolls of film. For learning technical things like that, instant playback (and thus feedback) is excellent. And at the end of the day, it's an educational tool - surely the photographic tool that provides the best level of feedback is the best one?
I learnt* on digital and then started shooting film - so I wasn't trying to learn all the basics of photography AND the basics of film & darkroom at the same time, they were split up.
[* I taught myself]
Everything is going digital anyway. 15years ago all there was were film, 15 years in the future all there will be is digital...I say move with the times and embrace it! Besides... You don't see cumputer courses using floppy disks because that's how it got started![]()
I learnt my photography skills using film, but I learnt my maths with the use of log tables. Would you expect todays maths GCSE's to include log tables or even slide rules? Digital is today's media, but who knows what tomorrow brings.
The thing is, us oldies CAN do mental arithmetic, and can go back to first principles to resolve a problem
@Strangways
I've recently turned nineteen & I've been taught darkroom since I was fourteen ~ I guess every photographer learns in different ways but I found that working manually with film made me understand the theory in Photography much more, I grasped how everything worked. It was through digital that I managed to practise & put more of my knowledge into effect so I suppose both are essential tools in learning today?
@Strangways
I hope others get to work with film at a younger age in the years to come!
TinaC said:I wonder what painters thought at the introduction of watercolours? Of course acrylic paint was never going to be used by 'real' artists...
![]()

@Strangways
Mm, I think anyone whose honestly passionate about photography will look into working with film. ~ at least, I hope so!
I'd like to think that, but I also regularly encounter "photographers" who can't get their heads around why anyone would chose to use film with all the modern fancy all singing-all-dancing DSLRs available.
I'd like to think that, but I also regularly encounter "photographers" who can't get their heads around why anyone would chose to use film with all the modern fancy all singing-all-dancing DSLRs available.
You try and explain the intangible qualities of film, the mechanical precision, the physical interaction with the controls, the chemical reaction that through your mechanical choices captures the light of a scene.
New is always better for some, and film is becoming an almost exclusively enthusiast territory. Soon there will be no film market for the casual snapper.
I'd like to think that, but I also regularly encounter "photographers" who can't get their heads around why anyone would chose to use film with all the modern fancy all singing-all-dancing DSLRs available.
Not a lot. Watercolour was about long before oils!![]()
Hahaha, I understand that theory in what @TinaC said.
The use of film shouldn't fade out entirely, digital is just a different medium to experiment with.