After doing my wedding photography seminar in Oct., one of the participants told me he didn't know a thing about film because his whole photographic experience has been digital. I'm sure there will be more like him in the near future.
Jim A. > From: "Daniel J. Matyola" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Organization: Stanley, Powers & Matyola > Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Date: Tue, 30 Nov 2004 15:59:01 -0500 > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: Generation Gap > Resent-From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Resent-Date: Tue, 30 Nov 2004 15:53:21 -0500 > > Someone gave me about 50 rolls of Agfa film last week. Since I'm > shooting mostly digital these days, I offered to give much of it to my son. > > While he was at my house, I told him about a woodpecker in the back yard > and asked him if he wanted to try to capture it on film. I also offered > to lend him my MZ-5, since I thought that was quite a bit better than > the cameras he was using. He just smiled, walked back to his car, and > brought back his camera bag. Inside was a new MZ-S he had just > acquired, with the battery grip. He was kind enough to let me play with > it a bit. > > I found it a bit amusing and ironic that my son the computer geek > decided to invest in a (relatively) up-to-date film camera, while his > old geezer of a father walks around with the *ist D. I guess maybe > there's hope for film after all. > > Dan M >

