It’s been close to six years since these puppies have seen the light of day. My old film cameras are finally sold to the second hand store. I think they will be used as an artificial reef in a fish tank or some other eco-proper application. The rolls of film which kept them company have an expiration of 2003. I guess the film gods were optimistic. Reports of film’s demise have not been exaggerated. Yes… there are a few diehards still using emulsion technology (do 8-track tapes still exist?). Of course, in order to get a print made they have to scan the negatives to create a digital file then print from that. What’s the point? The point is they have now made a second generation copy from the original. Not unlike making a tape recording of a tape. It gets degraded on each copy. Don’t get me wrong. I grew up with film and a wet darkroom. In my opinion, there is no better method by which photographic, technical know-how is achieved. Film… you have my gratitude.
As I pack these corpses of camera bodies, film spools and pressure plates for the journey to their final resting place, I bid them adieu.
“Film is dead… miss em’, miss em’ miss em” (Beatles fans will get that one)
As I pack these corpses of camera bodies, film spools and pressure plates for the journey to their final resting place, I bid them adieu.
“Film is dead… miss em’, miss em’ miss em” (Beatles fans will get that one)


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