Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/10/27
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Harrison: Good thoughts, all. I find myself thinking much like you. But I still find myself lusting after this week's edition of the perfect digital camera, which is starting to look like the M8. I too have found Costco's services to be a godsend. For ten bucks a roll, I get prints, I get decent C-41 developing, and I get JPGs that are the equivalent of a 6 megapixel digital camera in resolution. If I tell them to preserve highlight detail, the JPGs are usually adjustable to my liking for web use or even a 5x7 inkjet print. If I want bigger, I scan with my Canon FS4000. A Pro B&W lab here will do much the same for traditional B&W film, giving me 16-bit TIFFs, but minus the prints. For $15 per roll. All that said, I think I would use an M8 more than film if I had one. And I wonder if that really makes sense or not. Economically, it doesn't make sense. I'm not a pro photographer. Last night I counted up my shooting for the last two years. Per year, it comes to about two dozen 36 exposure rolls of film, plus about 1,034 digital frames, the equivalent of not quite 29 more rolls of film. That's the equivalent of 53 rolls per year total. If I shot that much film, it would save about $925/year in film costs, assuming $5/roll for the film. But I doubt I would shoot nearly that much if I didn't have the E-1. I didn't before I got it. So the supposed savings would actually be less. Probably more like three dozen rolls, tops. So it's more like $630. At that rate, it would take 7.5 years to pay for an M8. Why shoot digital? It's the time factor. Re-scanning the good shots takes time. Hassling with negatives, dealing with scratches, it takes time. And storage space. I have three years of negs and prints piled on a work table, and other stuff scattered all over the house. The ability to experiment and see the results immediately is wonderful. For really important stuff, I still shoot film. For friend's and relatives' weddings, travel, or projects in B&W, it's film. Certainly it's film for available light, as my E-1 is too noisy to shoot at 800 without a lot of postprocessing work. And for things that need a lot of fine detail, or a lot of dynamic range, film is still "it." And I really like the look of some film. But for a family event like my mother's 85th birthday party, or a casual weekend walkabout such as I posted last night, I take the E-1. It just seems the best way to get it done fast enough. The files the E-1 generates under reasonable conditions need little post-processing. I take the E-1 even though I'd much rather be shooting an RF. Now if I had an RF digital, I'd probably be taking it most of the time. And if it had resolution approaching the films I use, which the 5 megapixel E-1 and the 6 megapixel DSLRs decidedly do not, I might use it more than film. Maybe this is my equivalent of the middle-aged "hot red sports car." Maybe I just want to keep up with the times. Maybe I've been brainwashed by a cabal of sinister marketing executives. But when it comes down to it, I still just plain *want* a good digital RF. Or at least a more affordable digital camera more usable for my style of shooting. I'm working through this through myself, so I reserve the right to change my mind next week. :-) One thing I can tell you--if I had to carry a huge pro DSLR for work, I'd want to ditch it for my personal work, too. As I quipped several years ago, I don't want to be toting a hulking behemoth with a honking bazooka. :-) --Peter Harrison wrote: > Why would I shoot film, when I have one of the best digital cameras > made? For me there are several reasons. > First is that I get to use my Leica M6es more. Those are, to me, simply > the best photographic tools I have ever used. They are a no nonsense > camera. Somehow the M's seem to "get out of the way" of my creative > shooting and allow me to make photos that I like better and easier with > less thought than any SLR I have used. > Second I like dropping my film off, going back picking up the negs, > prints and a CD...all done and ready to put in a scrap book or whatever. > With digital I have to download, edit and then put on a CD take to the > lab and get prints made. The ability to edit and do final prep work on > the images is why I like Digital for work, but I HATE it for personal > photos. I do more than enough of that junk on a daily basis for paying > customers, do not care to do it for myself. I am just too lazy. LOL > I have discovered that at Costco they give excellent prints at a very > cheap price, also the photos they place on CD are more than adequate for > putting on the web, or other things I need a digital file for. Should I > need a larger file from a film image I can always scan it with my Nikon > 4000 and get a 40 meg scan.