My First Time Shooting Film: A Journey Back in Time šļø
Recently, we had an assignment at photography school that pushed me into an entirely new realm: film photography. I have to admit, I wasnāt exactly thrilled when I heard about it. It wasnāt fully my own choiceāmore of a mandatory exploration. I think film photography is one of those things that becomes fascinating once youāve already delved deep into digital photography. When youāve played around, experimented, and expressed your creative vision digitally, then you might crave a new challengeāsomething to push your boundaries further and test your limits. Thatās when film photography can become truly exciting: youāre forced to slow down, to be more intentional, to embrace the unexpected.
But for me, still feeling like Iām just getting my feet wet in the photography world, the whole experience was definitely a struggle. Letās say it was a real challenge (Iāll avoid using harsher words here!). Iām used to the instant feedback and precision of digital, so working with film felt like walking a tightrope blindfolded. Every shot felt like a gamble, and I couldnāt help but worry I was just wasting film rather than creating anything meaningful.
For this assignment, I used my dadās old Zenit ET camera. This camera is older than meāover 40 years old, to be exact. Itās a fully mechanical camera from the Soviet era, and it has its own soul, I think. My dad used this very camera to take portraits of soldiers during his military service in his youth. There was something almost poetic about holding it in my hands, like I was bridging the gap between my fatherās past and my present journey. Even though the process was tough, there was a sentimental value in knowing that maybe, just maybe, I inherited this passion for photography from him.
The Zenit ET is a purely mechanical beastāno fancy light meter or automatic settings to help you out. It was like being dropped into a completely foreign world. I ended up using my digital camera as a kind of cheat sheet. Iād set it to black and white mode to roughly test exposure settings, and then Iād transfer those settings to the Zenit. So, most of the time, I was wandering around with two cameras hanging from my shoulders, switching back and forth. It felt a bit silly, but I was determined to make sure I didnāt completely mess up my first rolls of film.
Speaking of rolls, I shot two films with it for this assignment. Iāve already scanned the first roll, which Iāll share below. It was a 400 ISO film, and although I tweaked the results a bit in Photoshop to lighten or darken some frames, I tried to keep the soul of film alive. The graininess, the imperfections, the unpredictable tonal rangeāitās something you just canāt replicate with digital photography, no matter how many filters you slap on.
One thing that struck me immediately was the nostalgic feel that film captures. The images have a timeless quality, even if the subject is completely ordinary. Thereās something about that soft grain, the slightly muted colors (or in this case, black and white tones) that pulls you into the past. Itās like the photos themselves are whispering storiesāstories that donāt need to be perfect to be beautiful.
Since I wasnāt photographing anything super creative or beautiful, I mostly just wandered around my parentsā yard, the countryside, and the nature surrounding it.
Reflecting on the experience, I still feel torn. On the one hand, I love the dreamy, tactile feel of film. On the other hand, Iām definitely not confident enough yet to let go of digitalās safety net. There were moments of real frustrationālike when I realized Iād misjudged the focus or messed up the exposure because I was relying on the digital camera too much and forgot to trust my instincts. But thatās the thing about film: you donāt really know what you have until you scan it. Itās a lesson in patience and trustāsomething I think I really needed to learn.
And honestly, thereās a kind of magic in that uncertainty. With digital, you can shoot a hundred frames and delete 99 of them because you didnāt like the angle or the lighting. With film, every shot costs you something. It forces you to slow down, to think twice before pressing the shutter. You start to see the world differently. Youāre more aware of the light, of the shadows, of the fleeting moments you might have otherwise overlooked.
I still have that second film to develop and scan, and Iām actually kind of excited about it. Itās supposed to be an infrared film (not fully but somewhat in this theme), which means the results should be even more otherworldly. I canāt wait to see what those images will look likeāif they turn out at all!
In the end, Iām glad I had to do this assignment. It also made me feel closer to my dad, holding that same camera he once used to document his own life. Maybe thatās what film photography is really about: not perfection, but connectionābetween you and the subject, between you and the past.
So hereās to my first foray into film photography. It wasnāt easy, and I definitely didnāt fall in love with it right away. But it showed me a different side of this art formāone thatās slower, more deliberate, and perhaps more honest in its imperfection.
Here are some photos from my first film roll below. Stay tuned for my second film roll soonāwho knows, maybe Iāll fall a little more in love with film next time around.
Have you ever tried film photography yourself? Or do you prefer the instant gratification of digital? Let me know in the commentsāIād love to hear your experiences! š«
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How cool, the shots look super vintage! Must have been an exciting experience. Reminds me of shooting with my dad's film camera in my early childhood š
Thank you! For sure, it was interesting! But I much prefer digital.. š
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Wow, such an amazing photos! Love them! š
Thank you! ā¤ļø
Nice and grainy! I like the old skool selfie š
You do learn to appreciate your own equipment more this way, don't you?
Thank you! And absolutely, I also very much appreciate photographers from the old days and still am in awe how they were able to get incredible photos especially in documentary photography where everything is moving, changing, etc... But in other genres as well. A lot of respect āØ