Photography, in this social media era, has become exhausting.
Not because taking pictures is difficult. That's still the easy part. It's everything surrounding it that wears you down. Every week there's another camera that's supposed to change your life. Another firmware update. Another YouTube expert explaining why you've been holding your camera wrong for the last ten years.
It's all noise. Everything built for likes and approval.
Sometimes I leave the house with an Olympus Infinity Stylus and a roll of 400-speed film.
That's it.
Plastic body. Fixed lens. Nobody on the street believes in me, that I can make something good with that small thing. Thirty-six exposures (sometimes 38) if I'm lucky enough not to waste any.
People assume it's nostalgia. They always do. Many think film is some kind of refuge for photographers who couldn't keep up. Or for hipsters.
They're wrong.
I didn't pick a film camera because it's old.
I picked it because it minds its own business.
Modern cameras have become needy. They constantly ask for decisions. Which autofocus mode? Which subject detection? Which custom profile? Which simulation? Which algorithm should think for you today?
By the time you've answered all those questions, the moment may be lost forever.
The street doesn't wait for the perfect AF.
I've spent enough years photographing people to know that hesitation kills more photographs than technical limitations ever will.
The Stylus has limitations.
Good. I want exactly that.
Limitations have a way of shutting people up.
You stop negotiating with the equipment because there's nothing left to negotiate. The camera has already made most of the decisions for you. My Olympus is different from my rangefinder. It is just pressing the shutter button. All that's left is deciding whether the scene deserves one of those thirty-six frames.
Oddly enough, that's liberating. A camera that looks like a little soap box.
The fewer conversations I have with my camera, the more conversations I have with the street.
That's a trade I'll make every single time.
We know it: so many photographers today spend more time discussing cameras than photographs.
Mention an autofocus system and you'll get a hundred opinions. Mention a photographer and the room goes quiet.
Somewhere the priorities became inverted.
Street photography was never built on technical perfection. Most of the photographs we continue to celebrate decades later would fail modern internet standards. They're grainy. They're crooked. Sometimes they're slightly out of focus.
Nobody cares.
The photographs survived because there was something worth looking at inside the frame.
That's a lesson a thirty-year-old point-and-shoot still teaches remarkably well.
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6 Comments
I used to own the original Olympus Stylus. I loved it except for one thing, the vignetting. Hopefully the Infinity and later versions don't do that.
I made this self portrait with the Olympus. I don't see any big vignette in my photos realized with this camera.
Try a mid-day, blue sky with no clouds.
I don't have that in the archive but maybe you can find this interesting. I made the photos with the camera and on my blog I shared the results. I photographed in the mid-day most of the times: https://alexcoghe.com/journal/i-shoot-film-italian-archive
Thanks for that. No, the Infinity doesn't vignette! Great.
Thanks to you. It is nice to have an open discussion on this. I can remember as a kid the magic days of the film era, and now in this super tech era I can see still interest for film and that is great. It makes everything more human.