I do miss 'Alt's' camera exchange. It became a Henrys Outlet for a short while before it moved to Mississauga. Every big city downtown needs a 'camera exchange'. Alts sold old film cameras too - which seems to be having a bit of a renaissance - lots of young people (20s) carrying film SLRs nowadays. Like a piece of jewelry around their necks - quite neat to see.
I do miss 'Alt's' camera exchange. It became a Henrys Outlet for a short while before it moved to Mississauga. Every big city downtown needs a 'camera exchange'. Alts sold old film cameras too - which seems to be having a bit of a renaissance - lots of young people (20s) carrying film SLRs nowadays. Like a piece of jewelry around their necks - quite neat to see.
This event is not 'downtown' but it's still the greatest place to,buy, sell & trade used photo equipment.
Everything under the sun that's photographic.
Literally thousands of cameras!
Not to be missed by any photographer or student.
The spring event is May 27, 2012 - see attached
T'will NOT be me. I spent most of my life waiting for them to invent their way out of THAT paper bag. When digital finally came out, my knees hit the floor and I wept with joy. Never looked back. Film? That's what you get on milk if you leave it out. "Pushing soup"? That's what Campbell's does. Give me 1s and 0s or give me death.
Oops! My big mistake.
The date for that huge, used photo equipment sale is May 27, 2012 - see attached
The March 4 date is for a photographic auction at another location - more info at: phsc.ca
Both are worthy of attention.
Well, I should probably say that I don't mean it in any absolute sense... I'm speaking purely for myself. At the risk of sounding condescending, I appreciate that there's real artistry in film photography. Quite honestly, I couldn't do it. When I had a film SLR in the late 80s and early 90s, I had no patience for it. For me, it was frustrating not knowing if a shot was any good till someone else produced it... having to wait till the whole roll was shot and the film developed and the prints made, and all of that costing money at every step. It just didn't work for me. I wanted it to, but it didn't. I knew I was waiting for something more immediate, more like working with audio. Then in '97 I saw the Kodak DC25--a real crappy camera any $120 bottom-of-the-line camera today could run circles around--and it was like the angels sang.
For me, I mean. For those of you who get film photography and the craft of it, I sincerely salute (and faintly envy) you. But for me, it's CCD, CMOS, and the 'Shop.