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<blockquote data-quote="Fozzybear" data-source="post: 1560924" data-attributes="member: 69297"><p>Not much of a comparison but here are a couple of Starlings, one taken on film in 1994 was, I think, my earliest attempt at photographing a bird and a second that was taken recently on digital kit in my back garden. The first was taken back in August 1994 on Fuji Neopan 1600 film (probably on a Canon A-1, not sure what lens I had back then), the second was taken earlier this year on a Nikon D300 with Sigma 150-500mm lens.</p><p></p><p>I went through a period of being fascinated with high ISO films and grainy photos, which is why this was taken on ISO1600 mono film. Somewhere I have some photos of Canada Geese taken on ISO1600 colour film (I think it was a Fuji type) and I used Kodak ISO 3200 T-Max film quite a bit too.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Fozzybear, post: 1560924, member: 69297"] Not much of a comparison but here are a couple of Starlings, one taken on film in 1994 was, I think, my earliest attempt at photographing a bird and a second that was taken recently on digital kit in my back garden. The first was taken back in August 1994 on Fuji Neopan 1600 film (probably on a Canon A-1, not sure what lens I had back then), the second was taken earlier this year on a Nikon D300 with Sigma 150-500mm lens. I went through a period of being fascinated with high ISO films and grainy photos, which is why this was taken on ISO1600 mono film. Somewhere I have some photos of Canada Geese taken on ISO1600 colour film (I think it was a Fuji type) and I used Kodak ISO 3200 T-Max film quite a bit too. [/QUOTE]
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