Of course, the high latitude of film is something that digital can't match, and the high latitude and high sensitivity are absolutely outstanding. In addition, film color reproduction is accurate (this obvious nonsense) without photoelectric conversion processing, the color is delicate. So, you can see that a good film shot out of the photo although the tolerance is very high, but not at all feel gray, but digital is not the same, the tolerance up immediately feel the picture began to empty, the color is not saturated enough
Well, in terms of shooting, the traditional camera is mainly based on the photographer's own experience of the exposure, of course, the traditional camera is also able to handle the requirements of the automatic exposure, but for the However, for multiple exposures on the same photo or for special effects, etc., it will demand a high level of skill from the photographer. If it is a single fool traditional camera, there is no operation, if it is a more advanced body, will also be like the current SLR as many turntable discs, including manual roll of film, manual focus ring, aperture adjustment, shutter time adjustment, including the B gate, the T gate, there is an aperture priority or shutter priority, these basic photographic parameters will not change, not many of the few changes is the choice of film sensitivity! Older cameras with automatic metering will let you choose how much film sensitivity is loaded inside in order to adjust the metering. The digital ones can automatically change it according to the environment.