Photography
Related: About this forumTime-Traveling Through 35mm Film
There are few things we cant get instantly these days. Film photography is one of them. Between the click of my Canon AE-1 and the day my photos are sent back from the film lab, Im giddy like its Christmas Eve. Will the shots be shadowy, overexposed or just right? Did anyone blink? What did I even photograph on that day weeks ago?
In an age of digital immediacy, film offers up these rare moments of unknowing, these chances for spontaneity. I grew up alongside the rise of iPhones and selfie cameras. Yet I fell in love with the analog format of photography when I picked up a preowned camera on eBay that was made in 1970s Japan. With each snap of the shutter, I feel nostalgic for an era I didnt even experience. Pixels and filters cant capture the interplay of light, shadow, color and grain like 35mm film, even for an amateur like me.
My generation seems to agree. While still small relative to digital cameras, the global market for film photography has resurged in recent years. More than two-thirds of film camera purchasers in 2023 were under 35, market data show. Among college students, disposable film camerasa relic of the 1980shave become popular. The revival of Kodak is a testament: After filing for bankruptcy in 2012, the film maker ended 2024 with a cash balance of $201 million.
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Then theres the quality of timelessness. I recently stumbled on a disposable camera in a drawer of my mothers desk. It was a finished roll and the flash was shot. Curiosity led us to send it to a film developer, but I expected blanks.
What we found was photos from two decades ago. My brother dancing in pajamas. Me attempting to hold a toothbrush as a toddler. My grandmother smiling at the breakfast table. A childhood bedroomId forgotten what it looked like. All frozen in time. Wed been left in the darkness of a drawer, waiting to materialize in a chemical bath that brought us into the light. Funny how these old photos look as if they could have been taken today, just as the images I capture now appear as though from decades ago. Thats the beauty of film and its grainy cloak of memory: It lets you travel through time. And it never fails to surprise.
https://www.wsj.com/opinion/time-traveling-through-35mm-film-8a13e38c?st=DHrLxM&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink
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Easterncedar
(5,268 posts)I have an old disposable Kodak. I wonder if the pictures I took 16 years ago are still developable.
HAB911
(10,109 posts)Easterncedar
(5,268 posts)If I can scrounge it up I will have to look for where to send it. Its been a long time since all the drug stores had the photo service!
usonian
(22,382 posts)Film photography taught me to compose, frame and meter carefully. I sill do this!
I'll let Ken Rockwell ramble instead.
"Why We Love Film"
https://www.kenrockwell.com/tech/why-we-love-film.htm
pansypoo53219
(22,715 posts)George McGovern
(10,046 posts)I once took and thoroughly enjoyed a college course for developing black and white film. One image in particular, taken through my beginner's Nikon camera with a Sigma 70-210mm zoom, has survived the proberbial test of time. It's my grandfather with his beloved but yappy poodles.

Old Crank
(6,407 posts)I still have hundreds of transparencies, some from 1975 in Greece. The ones that hit home were the small trove of 4x5 negatives and slides.
The ich is still there.