S
Speckles
Guest
I'm passionate about photography. I used to always use digital, until my camera broke. I'd always wanted to use an old-fashioned film camera, and my dream came true when my dad pulled out his 10-year-old Minolta. I just bought film for it (it's 35mm), and am excited to use it. I wanted to make a darkroom in one of the extra bedrooms at my house, and I was planning on buying the necessary chemicals, the special light for the dark room, etc. But then I looked it up and I realized learning the process would take a lot of time and the chemicals would take a lot of money. I am a senior in high school right now and will be graduating in a little over a month, so I am not going to go through with the dark room for now. For now, I am going to take pictures and have them developed at Wal-Mart, and I plan on using a dark room once I go to college and taking classes there to learn about the development process.
My questions are: are film cameras and dark rooms becoming obsolete? Does anyone still use dark rooms regularly? And, will I be able to create a dark room in my house when I am older and have a stable income, say as an English teacher? Will I be able to buy the things I need to develop in the dark room, and then make some money off of my photos? Would I have to learn the actual process BEFORE I get out of college and into a career, so that I'll have time?
By the way, I would like most to shoot at weddings and toddlers' birthday parties. Is this a realistic dream?
My questions are: are film cameras and dark rooms becoming obsolete? Does anyone still use dark rooms regularly? And, will I be able to create a dark room in my house when I am older and have a stable income, say as an English teacher? Will I be able to buy the things I need to develop in the dark room, and then make some money off of my photos? Would I have to learn the actual process BEFORE I get out of college and into a career, so that I'll have time?
By the way, I would like most to shoot at weddings and toddlers' birthday parties. Is this a realistic dream?