Berlin Photo Studio Knowledge Hub

THE FILM LIBRARY.

Choose a camera, understand your film, send a roll to the lab, read the negatives, prepare a scan and preserve the photographs. Every Berlin Photo Studio guide now begins from one place.

Canon Prima BF-8 compact 35mm camera representing beginner film photography guides
01 / START SHOOTING
Hardline 400 black-and-white film roll representing film selection guides
02 / CHOOSE FILM
ECN-2 film development work at Berlin Photo Studio representing laboratory guides
03 / DEVELOPMENT
Printed film contact sheet representing scanning printing and archive guides
04 / SCANS & PRINTS
New to analog photography?

Start with the question you have now.

You do not need to read everything. Choose the route that matches your stage: deciding why film matters, assembling a first camera-and-film combination, or developing an exposed roll.

WHY FILM?

Photography as memory

A personal explanation of physical originals, digital loss, prints and what photographs can leave behind.

Read why shoot film →
BEFORE THE FIRST FRAME

Choose camera + film

Compare point-and-shoot cameras, SLRs, ISO, DX coding and simple first-roll combinations.

Build a first kit →
AFTER THE LAST FRAME

Develop your first roll

Identify the process, choose JPEG or TIFF, understand negatives and bring or mail the roll.

Follow the first-roll guide →
Printed contact sheet showing a complete roll as a physical photographic record
Knowledge becomes a physical practice

Keep the negative. Understand the file. Make a print.

The guides are connected because analog photography is one continuous workflow. A camera choice affects exposure; exposure affects the negative; the negative affects the scan; the scan affects the print and archive.

Understand the complete development order →

Not sure where to begin?

If a roll is already exposed, start with the first-roll guide. If not, start with the camera and film.