Went through miles of Kodak film, mostly b&w, but color slide film as well. Used to buy it in 100' rolls and wind my own cassettes to save money. Now film is free, and no ore time in the darkroom.
Film required a different kind of discipline because you could not take an endless number of images. And of course cropping and brightening the image required a darkroom or at least an extra expense at the local photo store. Still, my camera batteries only had to be changed once a year! I miss that.
Here in Rochester, NY, Kodak was a big deal. Not anymore. Tom The Backroads Traveller
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ReplyDeleteFilm is kind of a bygone thing -- I wonder if my grandkids even know what it is!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much or hosting .
Kodak was the big and almost the monopoly on film in my Australia world. Those days are gone here too.
ReplyDeleteI got my first digital camera for a Christmas gift in 2001 and have not used film since.
ReplyDeleteKodak was a major employer in Toronto - now gone!
ReplyDeleteI had Kodak Cameras and have used Fuji Film. Things have sure changed in the whole photo world!
ReplyDeleteWent through miles of Kodak film, mostly b&w, but color slide film as well. Used to buy it in 100' rolls and wind my own cassettes to save money. Now film is free, and no ore time in the darkroom.
ReplyDeleteFilm required a different kind of discipline because you could not take an endless number of images. And of course cropping and brightening the image required a darkroom or at least an extra expense at the local photo store. Still, my camera batteries only had to be changed once a year! I miss that.
ReplyDeleteHello there
ReplyDeleteJust 'found' this meme. Is there a prepublished list of topics or does one wait until your post to discover what the topic is?
Cathy
oh, is you link-up closed? Too bad....
ReplyDeleteALOHA from Honolulu
ComfortSpiral
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