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So I miss photography.I've been out of it for a good four years now, and I miss the creative process...I had a Contax RTSII with the Zeiss 50mm my last two years of high school, and that camera was basically attached to my hip for that time.I really liked the way those old metal cameras worked, it was solid in your hands, with a manual advance that had a nice reassuring click. Or not, if you wanted a double exposure, it was your choice. No huge LCD screen to scratch in the field, just a viewfinder, your wits, and a fast lens to make the image. Of course I have a little Canon digital P&S that I bought in '04 or so, but it's not a platform for what I'd call serious photography. Makes me miss that Contax...or a Hassy, Rolleiflex TLR, or anything else that could withstand Armageddon and still take good shots.But even if I got that Leica or Rolleiflex of my dreams, there's the film issue...honestly, what's the future like in film? If I get back into this, I was thinking about going 6x6 medium format...just something I've wanted to try. Is the general consensus that companies are still going to be producing "obsolete" film? In the audio world we all know records aren't going anywhere soon because there's still demand for them, but I don't know about film...maybe, I hope my fears are wrong. Perhaps even I could afford better gear now than I could before, because so many people have gone digital...?So what would you guys suggest? I've used a friend's Nikon DSLR, and honestly, it bores me...
I have friends who obsess over the equipment/lenses and in some ways view digital gear as inferior. Yet what they shoot with their top notch equipment is frequently very pedestrian. I personally believe that the equipment is not going to make great photos. And I also believe that digital gear will get one's 10,000 bad photos out of the way a lot faster than film will. I recommend going to the http://photo.net/ galleries and see just how many great amateur photographers there are who are shooting digital.
...Part of what made 35mm cool for me was going back to the darkroom, and taking the image from the negative stage (although putting rolls in developing tanks really sucked, I'll give you that ), and ending up with a finished print....I don't get the same sense of...ownership, I guess you could say, with digital. It's just plug a USB cable into the computer and press a button, poof, images. Sure, you can touch up and Photoshop the images all day, but I didn't feel like I did anything.