Many years ago when I was at school I was lucky enough to be able to study photography. One of the teachers was passionate about the subject and arranged for a darkroom to be installed and for camera's to be bought.
I spent two years studying the art form and acquired my first SLR camera, prior to that I had had a 110 format point and press cartridge film camera. As schools are always under funded we mainly worked in black and white. The film and chemicals are much cheaper and the students could run off more pictures. I must admit that I really enjoyed working in black and white. We looked at many aspects of photography from formal portraits, through still life and to landscapes. One of my personal favourites back then was studio portraits. I loved trying different effects with light and shadow.
Once I left school I had to give up a bit. There are all the usual reasons, like I didn't have time etc. but one of the main reasons was financial. I didn't earn much and the cost of getting film processed made it prohibitive. I still took pictures but only on days out or at special occasions.
When digital cameras became affordable I bought a Fujifilm 2 megapixel point and press type.
I still had my trusty old Praktica but it was an old model and getting anything for it aside from film was very hard, plus there is the instant gratification of digital. I switched to mainly taking digital pictures but still dug the SLR out from time to time.
When I could afford to get back into 35mm photography it was near impossible to buy lenses and other add-ons for my old SLR so I did some searching around and bought a second hand Canon EOS5.

After having used a completely manual SLR the features on the EOS5 where wonderful. having the unit autofocus, adjust the shutter speed, auto wind etc meant that I could take almost fool proof photos. I still had the option to go completely manual and at times I did but generally I let the camera do most of the hard work.
I started taking more photos and often I would get them developed either straight to disc or to normal prints with a digital copy, I also used the Fujifilm a lot as it was simply easier to carry around.
One day the Fujifilm got dropped one too many times, the battery cover cracked and the camera had been chewing through batteries more quickly anyway. So off I went to get a replacement for it. After searching around I got a Sony Cyber-Shot DSC-S600.
This is a great little camera. It's small enough to carry in a pocket and takes great pictures and can do basic video footage. I still used the EOS 5 but having moved countries I was finding the cost of developing film to be getting expensive again. As I regularly brought cameras to my partner’s family events I started getting asked to take photos at birthdays and weddings. A good friend of my partners has a Nikon D40

This allowed me to run off literally hundreds of pictures at an event. With a laptop and card reader in tow, I could download the pictures and keep right on shooting, sorting through the pictures I had taken to delete any that were not any good. The EOS 5 still came out now and then but more and more I was taking Digital pictures.
Early this year I was again asked to be the photographer at the wedding of a niece of my partner. Unfortunately, the owner of the Nikon was away on holiday so I couldn't borrow her camera. I found all this out while camped in Taupo and with 4 days to go until the wedding.
Now I had been looking at replacing the EOS 5 with a digital equivalent for a few years. When I first started looking I decided that I wanted to stay Cannon so I could reuse lenses and my flashgun. I had done a fair amount of research and talked to some other photographers whose opinion I trusted. I settled on the upper end of the Canon Digital range without getting into the 1D or 5D as these are really aimed, in my estimation, at the pro photographer and have a price tag to match. The current version of the range I was looking at is the EOS 40D
This camera has all the functions of my old EOS5 plus all the fun effects you'd expect of digital. I spent a couple of days playing with it before the wedding and then ha a field day at the wedding itself. I think I took just over 1000 pictures on that day and I must say I am pretty pleased with them. There are still a lot of functions I want to play with to really understand what the camera is capable of, and given the easy manipulation of the images, I really want to get back into what I enjoyed when studying, black and white photography.
Currently, I have the last 2 weddings up on my website. I have also added a whole set of photos I took at Christmas of a very nice sunset over the ocean. There is also a category for random wanderings where I plan on loading copies of pictures I take that I am especially pleased with.
Feel free to check them out in the Gallery at
www.shadownet.org.uk