• ButtBidet [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      4 days ago

      Literally everyone I knew had a low quality digital camera. Most people either had some sort of MP3 player, with the post people having iPods.

      God I got so much book reading done when on mass transit.

      • Lenins_Sabocat@lemmygrad.ml
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        4 days ago

        Those digital cameras were still outpacing early smartphones. I would say all the way up to the mid 10’s. Anything taken with a smartphone camera from 2008 until like 2013 looks pretty bad, especially in low light.

      • I remember my family ditching their film cameras in favor of a digital camera I got as a gift when I was a child… The camera had 3.2 megapixels and now all our pictures from back then look like ass.

        Can’t blame them though… Developing and printing film was such a large expense and hassle to go through.

        • ButtBidet [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          4 days ago

          Ya I lived through the 80s, 90s, and naughts. I never had a film camera, just because I never had enough disposable income to get film developed. Because of economic inequalities, cameras were often something that dads had.

          I have IRL friends now who do the film camera thing cuz they’re arty. Honestly I don’t mind, but it’s not a cheap hobby.

          • TraschcanOfIdeology [they/them, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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            4 days ago

            Yeah, I grew up at a time when point-and-shoot film cameras were cheap enough that each household had one, but we often had so save for months and let film rolls accumulate in a drawer until we managed to go develop them (all of my family is so adhd it’s not even funny). I remember the development being really cheap, but printing the pictures was where the labs took you for a ride. When we got a film camera that had the tech to produce a test strip and select pictures before printing them we were so relieved.

            I do the film camera thing because it forces me to be more aware of when I take pictures and of what/whom… I like the feel of the clunky mechanical cameras, and my dad left me a Soviet-made SLR that’s a workhorse. It’s also nice to have physical objects that jog your memory, instead of thousands of pictures I forget exist until I go looking for something on my phone. It is pretty expensive though. I’ll go for months without taking pictures until I have enough to get by and spend on film and development.