Why I returned to film

A LIFE IN FRAMES.

Film photography is not only a look. It is a way to leave something physical behind: an original negative, a print, a box that another person can open years after us.

Film photograph printed as part of a physical archive
Interior scene photographed on film
Warm colour photograph made from a film negative
THE ORIGINAL STILL EXISTS
A personal reason

I lost more than files.

Over the years, I lost more than 18 terabytes of digital files. Many of them were photographs of my family. At the time, they felt safely stored because they existed on hard drives. Then drives failed, folders disappeared and parts of that history were simply no longer there.

When my mother died in 2019, I understood those missing photographs differently. They were not only data from old jobs or forgotten years. They were memories I could no longer remake.

That experience brought me back to analog photography. I wanted the photograph to have an original physical form—something that could survive outside one computer, one account or one generation of storage.

“One day, my child may discover my life through the images I leave behind.”Emiliano Vittoriosi · Berlin Photo Studio
The honest version

Film is physical. It is not immortal.

A negative can be scratched, flooded, burned, lost or thrown away. A hard drive can fail. A cloud account can close. No medium removes responsibility.

01

Keep the negative

It is the physical photographic original and can be inspected or scanned again.

02

Keep digital copies too

Store scans in more than one place and check that the copies can still be opened.

03

Make prints

A photograph becomes visible and discoverable without a device, password or file browser.

Why start shooting film?

Six benefits beyond the film “look.”

01 / A PHYSICAL ORIGINAL

The image exists outside the screen.

After development, the negative or transparency remains a material object. It can be held, archived, printed and scanned again with future tools.

02 / ATTENTION

Fewer frames can mean clearer choices.

A finite roll encourages you to pause, look at the light and decide whether the photograph matters before pressing the shutter.

03 / MEMORY

Waiting changes how you meet the image.

You do not immediately judge every frame on a rear screen. The time between taking and seeing can separate the memory from the instant reaction.

04 / DISCOVERY

An archive can be opened by someone else.

Labels, sleeves, contact sheets and prints give another person a visible route through your life—not only a folder structure known to you.

05 / LEARNING

Mistakes remain useful.

Exposure, focus, film choice and development leave evidence on the negative. Reading that evidence can make photographic decisions more deliberate.

06 / CONTINUITY

The same negative can have another life.

It can become a contact sheet today, a new scan later, a darkroom print, a family album or a rediscovered image decades from now.

Film negatives and laboratory work representing the preservation of physical photographs
Build an archive someone can understand

Do not only save. Leave a map.

A box of unidentified negatives can survive and still become difficult to use. Preservation becomes more meaningful when the next person can recognise who, where and when.

01

Date the roll or sleeve. Even a year and place are better than nothing.

02

Name the people. Do not assume the next generation will recognise every face.

03

Keep negatives in archival sleeves. Store them cool, dry and away from direct light.

04

Create TIFF masters and practical JPEG copies when the images have lasting importance.

05

Print selected photographs. A smaller edited set is often more discoverable than thousands of hidden files.

Read Archive Your Family Negatives →

A different relationship with time

You do not need to photograph everything.

The value of film is not that every frame becomes precious automatically. The value is that the limitation asks a question: why am I taking this photograph?

Sometimes the answer is artistic. Sometimes it is simply because this person, this room or this ordinary afternoon may one day be impossible to return to.

Photographs become objects

Negative. Scan. Print.

Film preparation workbench at Berlin Photo Studio

01 / THE FILM IS HANDLED

Printed contact sheet used to review a complete roll of film

02 / THE ROLL BECOMES VISIBLE

Photographic prints made from selected images

03 / SELECTED MEMORIES LIVE ON PAPER

Your first roll does not need to be perfect

Start with one part of your life.

Choose a simple camera and film

A working camera and a versatile film are more important than collecting equipment.

Photograph people and places you know

Your home, friends, family and daily route may gain meaning long before a technically impressive test frame.

Write the date and context

Start the archive while the information is still easy to remember.

Develop, scan and collect the negatives

The files are convenient; the negatives are the physical originals. Keep both.

Print a small selection

Do not wait for a perfect portfolio. Make the photographs you want to remain visible.

Not film versus digital

The strongest archive uses both.

DIGITAL

Make redundant copies.

Keep important scans on more than one device or location, use clear filenames, verify backups and migrate the archive before old storage becomes unreadable.

Understand scan files and archival scans →
Begin with one roll

Photograph what you would want someone you love to discover one day.