0:02
YouTube it's me Nicholas Cordo I am a
0:10
extraordinaire today I want to talk
0:13
about photography um have you ever
0:17
wondered what it's like to take a photo
0:27
mm and then on digital today we're at my
0:31
friend Sam's house we're going to shoot
0:33
some photos I want to shoot essentially
0:35
the same photo on all of the mediums to
0:38
just kind of see the and feel the
0:41
difference between all of them so with
0:44
shooting with the iPhone I think it's
0:46
awesome because everyone probably will
0:48
have some sort of mobile phone to take a
0:50
photo on I think that you kind of get
0:52
lost and you could take a lot of photos
0:54
and maybe the lighting isn't so perfect
0:57
but you can kind of manufacture it with
1:00
editing and whatever you want to um I
1:03
think one of the cons about taking
1:05
photos on your phone is that there isn't
1:07
this nostalgic feel to it um that you'll
1:09
get with something like film and I think
1:11
that there's other aspects like you
1:15
might just have too many photos you
1:16
might have overshot something and you
1:19
might never get that real Cinema or very
1:22
you know um artsy look from a an iPhone
1:27
photo it's not it's it's not a camera
1:31
that's anything other than a phone
1:33
camera um I think that phone cameras
1:37
have gotten a lot better and you know
1:39
everyone can take a nice photo but I
1:41
think to an extent photography is a bit
1:44
more than just just an
1:46
iPhone um when shooting with digital I
1:49
think the best part about shooting in
1:51
digital photography is that uh there's a
1:54
lot that you can manipulate with
1:55
settings on the actual camera you can
1:58
get particular feel a particular
1:59
particular look um you can enhance the
2:02
light settings the the exposure anything
2:06
um and I think that especially with
2:09
other tools like Photoshop and you know
2:11
reworking images especially shooting in
2:13
raw and something like that um you can
2:17
get exactly what you want um but I think
2:21
there's definitely some cons to it
2:23
there's the same aspect of shooting with
2:25
an iPhone where you could just shoot as
2:27
much as you want I'm sure you know you
2:29
have the size of the memory card that
2:31
you're using or the terabyte that you're
2:33
using to shoot with but I mean you could
2:36
just shoot thousands upon thousands of
2:38
photos and maybe never get that one or
2:40
not be able to fully see that one until
2:43
you've shot too many I think a big thing
2:45
about the the digital photography aspect
2:47
is you can get a digital camera um a lot
2:51
of digital cameras won't be even as good
2:53
as your iPhone to be honest so um if you
2:56
want a good digital camera you're going
2:57
to be spending a lot of money and
2:59
especially with lenses and and you know
3:02
just like even the main build itself
3:05
like this isn't something that you can
3:06
fit in your pocket you you'll need a
3:08
separate bag or kind of just be hoisting
3:10
it everywhere with you film photography
3:14
um this is the Olympus oh 2 this is a
3:18
35mm camera I'm going to shoot Kodak 200
3:23
um or gold so 200 ISO best part about
3:27
film is remember that for me that it's
3:30
that nostalgic feel uh you know I'm
3:32
shooting a physical thing after I'm done
3:35
with the roll it's going to come out and
3:36
I can touch it and I can look at it and
3:38
it's mine forever um like it's it's not
3:41
like some weird memory card that's going
3:43
to I'm going to plug it into my computer
3:44
and it's going to disappear and I can't
3:46
see it anymore I think that again with
3:50
all film photography you're you're going
3:53
to have a lot of cost you know an
3:54
average roll of film something like
3:57
Kodak gold is going to cost $12 and
3:59
that's probably a cheaper end of that
4:01
role um but rolls can range you know if
4:04
we're talking about like portra 160 or
4:06
400 we're talking about like maybe $18 a
4:09
roll depending on where you're getting
4:10
it you can choose to use a correct film
4:14
stock or create a different type of
4:19
photo maybe make a painting with a photo
4:21
I think you can do that with digital as
4:23
well as with like editing tools but I
4:25
think that film photography is a little
4:28
more sacred it's uh it has its own thing
4:35
Polaroid Polaroid photography is great
4:38
for that nostalgic feel so this is the
4:40
Polaroid I2 it came out last year um
4:43
it's Polaroid's newest camera it has the
4:46
best lens that they've ever had um the
4:49
best part about this camera is that I
4:52
can do manual multiple exposures up to
4:55
four exposures and I get to decide I
5:00
exposure compensation at the top as well
5:03
that I can change from -2 to two in that
5:06
range and that's just manipulating
5:08
essentially the iso depending on where
5:11
you're shooting how much light is
5:12
available you also have the ability to
5:14
do shutter priority aperture priority
5:17
but the lowest f-stop is eight so it's
5:19
more of for something like in a
5:21
landscape based photography if you're
5:23
going to be doing aperture based
5:25
priority um I think that on this camera
5:28
the best part is is you get it right
5:30
away it's that instantaneous
5:33
gratification when you're taking film
5:35
photos where you know usually when
5:37
you're taking a photo on film you got to
5:39
wait for it to get developed either
5:41
you're bringing it to a lab or you're
5:43
going to do it yourself and it just it
5:46
it costs in in work um and it costs in
5:48
money and a lot of the time sometimes
5:52
things can not be done properly or
5:55
something happened in the camera and you
5:56
might lose all the photos um you might
5:59
have a light leak there might be a
6:00
problem with your lens and it it's it's
6:04
more of an expensive process than uh a
6:07
lot of other forms of Photography um and
6:11
then you know if you're talking about
6:13
Polaroid average a photo is going to
6:16
cost you around $2 if not more depending
6:19
on the stock that you're shooting um
6:21
with a polaroid you're just going to get
6:23
exactly what you took a photo of
6:26
obviously depending on where the film
6:28
itself was stored if it was stoed stored
6:30
in a dry or a a cold place or a wet
6:34
place or a warm place it's going to be
6:36
really dependent on how well those
6:38
photos are actually going to come out a
6:40
lot of the time if it's stored too cold
6:43
it will come out very green and a lot of
6:45
the time if it's stored in more of a
6:47
warm place or a damp place it's going to
6:50
happen to come out I would say on the
6:52
redder side and or dark dark green um
6:57
and you'll just have kind of like a
7:01
a bad exposure just because the Emulsion
7:03
is going to be affected by the
7:04
temperature um and yeah that's that's it
7:18
th hey guys it's filter grade here again
7:34
thanks for joining us today for this
7:36
fantastic video going through you know
7:39
photography as it is in our Modern Age
7:42
you know we got film we got digital we