
Film Photography Revival: Reasons It’s Making a Resurgence
Share
Film Photography Revival: 12 Reasons It’s Making a Strong Resurgence in 2025
Curious About the Film Photography Comeback? FAQs Answered
-
Is film photography still relevant in 2025? Yes! It’s thriving with new films, cameras, and a passionate global community.
-
Are 35mm, 120, or large format films still made? Absolutely—Kodak, Ilford, and others are launching new stocks regularly.
-
Is this just a fleeting trend like Lomography? Nope, it’s a sustained movement, backed by rising sales and re-manufactured cameras.
-
Does Instax count as film photography? Not quite—it’s instant, while actual film involves a hands-on development process.
-
Where can I buy reliable film cameras? Check trusted sellers on eBay or Etsy for serviced models, or explore new ones like the Pentax 17.
New to film? Dive into our beginner’s guide: How to Get Started in Film Photography.
Film photography isn’t just hanging on—it’s roaring back to life. Vintage cameras, such as the Canon AE-1 or Nikon F3, are fetching prices higher than some professional digital SLRs, with eBay reporting 25-50% annual price spikes for sought-after models. Hobbyists are hooked, and pros are weaving film into premium offerings for weddings and portraits, delivering timeless results clients love.
Some call it nostalgia, like vinyl records, which outsold CDs in 2022. But the numbers don’t lie: film’s resurgence is real. Kodak’s 2024 sales of film stocks surged 20%, and manufacturers are doubling down. Kodak revived Ektachrome in 2017 and expanded Gold 200 to 120 format. CineStill launched 400D in 2022, followed by Ilford’s Kentmere 100/400 in 120. ORWO Wolfen debuted the NC500 and NC400 color films, and Harman Photo introduced Phoenix 200 in 2023, upgrading to Version II in July 2025 based on feedback from photographers. New cameras, such as Leica’s reissued M6 ($5,900 body-only) and Pentax’s 2024 release, the Pentax 17, signal industry confidence.
Online, the movement thrives: Reddit’s r/analog boasts 1.5 million members, and YouTube channels like Negative Feedback (500K+ subscribers) fuel enthusiasm with tutorials. This isn’t a fad—it’s a global revival with staying power.
What Is Film Photography?
Film photography uses analog cameras with light-sensitive film (35mm, 120 medium format, or 4x5 large format). You expose the film to light, then develop it chemically to create negatives or slides, which can be printed in a darkroom or scanned digitally. Unlike digital’s instant previews, film demands patience and skill. Instant formats like Instax differ due to their self-developing nature—here, we focus on the classic film process.
EXAMPLES OF FILM PHOTOGRAPHY
12 Reasons Film Photography Is Making a Comeback
From its soulful aesthetic to cultural shifts, here’s why film is captivating photographers in 2025:
1. Authenticity and Credibility
2. Richer Image Quality
3. Unmatched Aesthetic Appeal
4. Therapeutic and Mindful
5. Handmade Prints
6. Simpler Than Ever
-
Modern kits, such as those from Arista and CineStill, make home developing easy, with online tutorials that significantly reduce the learning curve.
-
Affordable reloaded disposables under $20 let beginners experiment without breaking the bank.
7. Longevity and Cost-Effectiveness
8. Exclusivity for Special Moments
9. Authentic Portraits
10. Nostalgia and Vintage Vibes
11. Thriving Online Communities
12. Escape from Digital Fatigue
Addressing the Doubters: Is Film Really Worth It?
Some argue that film is too expensive or environmentally harmful due to the chemicals. However, costs are manageable—$10-15/roll, plus development—and are competitive with digital gear upgrades. Home kits also help cut expenses. Environmentally, reusable cameras reduce e-waste (film users generate 50% less tech trash than digital-only photographers). The trade-off? Unmatched artistry and durability that digital can’t replicate.
Hybrid Workflows: The Best of Both Worlds
Blend film’s magic with digital’s ease:
Try AI-assisted scanning tools (new in 2025) for sharper, faster results.
Buying Tips: Start Smart
-
Choose Reliable Gear: Buy serviced cameras from reputable sources like eBay, Etsy, or retailers like KEH Camera. Avoid untested garage sale finds—repairs can cost over $ 200.
-
Stock Up: Explore new films like Harman Phoenix 200 or classics like Kodak Portra.
Join the Film Revival!
Ready to shoot analog? Browse our film selection or developing kits. Need help? Contact us for tailored advice. Sign up for our newsletter for weekly film tips and inspiration!
19 comments
Way back in 1974 I walked into a camera store and purchased an Olympus Om1n 35mm film camera and begin the long journey of learning the craft. The craft in my opinion consists of using the camera while learning to see, to find your photographic voice. I realized that when I saw an art show of Eugene Atget’s work at the San Francisco Museum of Fine Art in the late 70’s I spent hours looking at his images and frankly it leveled me back to ground zero.
The craft also consists of learning composition, exposure and depth pf field. It was a tedious grueling task to set a fully manual camera and then wait a week to get your film back to see what you did. But unlike today where there is the green box full auto and instantly seeing your work. That process forced you to learn the craft. You simply had no choice. Thankfully there was Popular Photography magazine and peoples work you could go see. I became a fan of the greats like Eugene Atget, Ansel Adams and Galen Rowell. I mean who wouldn’t.As time progressed I also marched along with it. Kept all my film cameras even the 120. I embraced digital and enjoyed its technology. In fact I still do enjoy both film and digital. Yet I would be lying if I said I couldn’t see a difference between the two formats. There is a certain real authenticity to film that digital cannot replicate. I have come to the conclusion that it’s similar to analog music really. The way light is gathered on to the randomly scattered silver halide crystals v.s. being gathered by a computer driven sensor. Could it be that us being human feel an affinity to a less perfect image so full of life and color? Seems that people sure love to debate that online.
There’s a lot at work when we honestly start discussing the two platforms. Today its a much easier transition from the modern cell phone to a digital camera.
Film cameras seem daunting to folks today so used to buttons and programs. What do you mean there is no image to see on the back when I push the button ? I have to learn F-stops and shutter speed? I always thought f stop was a famous truck stop on route 66. I thought it was eeeeeso not I-S-O. Isn’t A-S-A really Aaaaaaasaw. LOL!!!!! But ya know maybe besides the film aesthetic what people are looking for is the soul of photography by slowing down and seeing the image for themselves rather than creating pictures just like 90 % of everyone else using the green box full auto point and shoot style.
It seems today at least to me that much of photography looks the same. I must say that its even becoming more exacerbated in a mirrorless camera world with Images that look so sharp they dont even look like what we see, which means they can appear unnatural. Then taken to post production in the computer and adding HDR pictures begin to look like paintings.
I am sure that photographers can remember certain images that are so well captured they simply stop time. They continue to speak to them years later and never stop. They are timeless. because they are so uniquely powerful. Which really speaks to the best camera of all the human eye, processed with the fastest computer the human mind, and captured with the best program the human soul. I think with that in mind it’s quite possible film never really died like many folks proclaimed. Just out of curiosity I called a camera store in the big city an hour away and found out the process 20 to 40 rolls of 35mm film a day. One thing remains photography is a wonderful thing and seeing while stopping time to preserve a moment a great endeavor.
Thank you for the great article “9 Reasons…” about why people are returning to film cameras. Good for you to publish the detector who says there’s no difference between film and digital. All success to you ! And God bless !
John Masefield, the Poet, had it right when he wrote:-
“I must go down to the sea again….” particularly when he named the equipment he needed to use, for I, at a mere 78yrs old, have been desperate to be reunited with the tools of my previous Professional Industrial and Architectural Photographer days, in London, in the same ways.
Digital? Apart from my 40mp mobile phone, I’ve never really loved it the same way as true analog[ye] – as it’s called these days – film, where one not only ever took just the one photograph of the subject (unless one was taking a photograph in colour, where we might take two, with just one stop or half a stop between the two. I mean, however one can compare digital to analog, or analog to digital, amazes me.
Apart from the actual number of photographs one took, the other element that was wonderful when a dedicated film darkroom and a dedicated print room was available to use whatever the hour of day, was how we “edited” the negatives before printing, by using torch bulbs, a rheostat, and sheets of tissue paper, at times helped along by a judicious pair of scissors! Photoshop? Who needs such programs when a hands-on approach works so well?!
Lighting back then was all so important, whether knowing – before football Ng on the “job” which direction a building faced, knowing the best time of day for taking the photograph whether or not the sun was shining, and even when photographing an architectural model if a building, knowing exactly where the sun or light would be at any specific time of day, so that we could ensure the light shown as it touched upon the model, would be exactly the same as it would be on the once-completed buildings. Another instance where “light” played such an important part, was either in the Studio, or on-site, whether that was inside properties, or in a Client’s showrooms where shadows from our photoflood lamps should never appear! Our method for such shots? We “painted” the subject by light, but in a way that not only were shadows never seen, but allowed us – once we’d processed and dried the film – to paint out the background, so that once printed, the large bookcase, or sofa, or bureau etc would appear against a totally white back-, side-, and fore- ground.
Oh, I could tell many stories (only truths) about my years working in Professional Photography, from the completely different Press and Commercial Photographic Agency (Fox Photos Ltd., London) through to be years I worked at Millar & Harris, Industrial and Architectural Photographers in Baker Street, London, and then as Works Photographer at AWCO Ltd, in Swansea, South Wales, UK.
Cameras used?
Gandolfi 1/1 (ie Whole Plate) 8.25″ × 6.25″ cut film, mostly monochrome film, sometimes colour negative film, rarely Colour transparency film, loaded into Double Darkslides
MPP Flat bed type 4″ × 5″ Double Darkslide, Cut Film Camera
An ancient (1930s?) Rollei Twin-lens reflex 120 roll-film Camera, and
A battered old 35mm roll-film Leica with rangefinder that usually couldn’t be used, primarily because it was only ever used on one job (to take photos of specific table settings in the Wedgwood Showrooms in London).
The reintroduction of film will indeed bring more thought into what is the professionalism of Photography, where instead of Happy -Snappys (apologies for such language!) each photograph taken has to be 100% correct in every way – even before it’s chemically processed!
Thank you for letting me revel in my past, although I also look forward to a new film career with 4″ × 5″ cut film, possibly with a Sinar Monorail camera, square bellows, rise and fall, as well as sliding and swinging fronts and backs, and a decent tripod (ah, just thought, I already have such a tripod, so just need the camera, dark slides, cut film, a decent light meter, a black cloth, plus an excellent processing and printing firm, and I’ll be back!
Thank you so much for promoting the differences, and also for highlighting how Professionals might return to what Photography is all about; the creation of photographs!
Having a vintage camera cleaned and/repaired is easier said than done.
I found a Nikkormat FT3 that was in real good condition, all it needed was a cleaning(the focusing screen had some kind of black material on it around the edges. I took it to a camera repair shop but they refused to even look at it because they said they would be unable to find parts for it. I asked that they just clean it but still they refused. for the same reason. They would be unable to find a focusing screen for it. Its now part of my collection but I would have really liked to put a roll of film through it.
The author is correct stressing the unique look of film. But it seems some people are unable to see the qualitative differences of film to digital, as is obvious from their comments they even deny these qualities exist. Theirs is a useless exercise, they will never be artists.