The Advantages to Film Cameras over Digital Cameras

A couple of downside issues about digital photography exist. Digital photography’s negative aspects may or may not outweigh its benefits for you. To help you decide whether digital photography is right for you, here are the major downsides:

  • Getting enough resolution: To enjoy the same high quality prints from your digital camera that you’ve come to expect from your film camera, you need a camera that offers moderate-to-high image resolution, which costs. Images from lower-priced models just don’t contain enough picture information to produce decent prints.

    A digital photo from a high-resolution camera (left) and a low-resolution camera (right).
    A digital photo from a high-resolution camera (left) and a low-resolution camera (right).
  • Dealing with delays: On many smaller or less expensive digital cameras, after you press the shutter button on a digital camera, the camera requires a few seconds to record the image to memory. During that time, you can’t shoot another picture. With some cameras, you also experience a slight delay between the time you press the shutter button and the time the camera captures the image.

  • Having to become tech savvy: Becoming a digital photographer involves some skills you may not yet possess. If you’re familiar with a computer, you shouldn’t have much trouble getting up to speed with digital images.

    A digital camera may look and feel like your old film camera, but underneath the surface, it’s a far cry from your father’s Kodak Brownie.

Comments (1)

  1. Posted by Cerebus
    Also worth noting are: 1) Film lasts (practically) forever. Stored properly, chromogenic film (color negatives and slides) will last for 50 years (leftover unreacted dye couplers are the main problem, but decay of organic dyes also take a toll). K-14 film (Kodak Kodachrome) is particularly stable (the process eliminates unreacted dye couplers and uses particularly stable color dyes) with a storage life projected at 200 years. Silver halide film (black & white) is stable as long as the film substrate is stable--which could be almost literally forever. 2) Film can be rescanned at higher resolutions when larger image sizes are needed. The practical limit for most 35mm films is 4000x6000 pixels--24 megapixels--because of film grain/dye clouds. Finer-grained film (e.g., Fuji Velvia or Kodak Kodachrome) can be scanned at higher resolution. This is *without* interpolation, resulting in higher quality output from the original image. Simply put, you *can't do that* with digital cameras; once that shot is taken, the resolution is fixed.

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