
Why You Should Be Shooting Film
It's not just hipster nonsense. There are terrific practical reasons for any photographer to shoot a roll or two.

It's not just hipster nonsense. There are terrific practical reasons for any photographer to shoot a roll or two.

Vintage shooters from every era still worth adding to your collection.
By AJ Powell, Henry Phillips, and Tucker Bowe

Looking to shoot film? These are the eight best films for every situation.
By Henry Philips and Eric Limer

50 amazing images from NASA’s Mercury, Gemini and Apollo missions captured on Hasselblad Cameras.

It’s about finding the perfect shot, taking a bit more time, and rolling the dice with some expired film.
By John Zientek

The movie theaters, universities and museums that use 35mm film projectors to show movies the way the filmmakers intended.

In Hawaii, during the late 1970s, Ballard Trent Edwards V would strap a massive longboard to the roof of his VW Fastback and drive to the beach.

The Lomo’Instant camera goes beyond other instant cameras with its range of creative controls and add-ons while still appealing to a new generation of analog photographers just looking for a start shooting film.
By Jack Seemer

Why do some filmmakers still shoot on film? We followed the film from Kodak’s headquarters to the big screen to find out.

The Impossible Project is the sole surviving manufacturer of Polaroid instant film.
By Jack Seemer

In 2010, the final roll of Kodachrome was developed by Dwayne’s Photo, a lab in Parsons, Kansas.
By Jack Seemer

Lumu is an innovative new light meter that works with something you already have in your pocket — a smartphone.
By Jason Heaton

The Nikonos camera produced many of history’s greatest underwater images.
By Jason Heaton

What shooting film lacks in instant gratification, it makes up for in satisfaction, especially if you learn to process and scan your own film.
By Jason Heaton

Iceland is perhaps the most exotic place on Earth. And it’s only a five-hour flight from Manhattan.
By Jason Heaton

More than 50 years in the making, the 540-acre Peak 6 opened on Christmas Day, 2013, bringing a fantastic mix of terrain that fills a surprising gap in Breckenridge’s arsenal. The new terrain offers some of the only above-treeline skiing for intermediates in the country and even more of Breck’s famous expert terrain.