There’s a kind of magic in analog film that digital just can’t replicate. Super 8 and 16mm don’t simply capture how your day looked; they preserve how it felt. The grain, the softness, the flicker of light between frames; it all comes together like memory in motion. Super 8 brings a nostalgic warmth and imperfect charm that makes even the smallest moments feel cinematic, while 16mm offers a richer, more soulful look, like a timeless short film. Both formats are honest, emotional, and impossibly romantic. Shooting on real film means we move with intention, focused not on trends or perfection, but on creating something textured, tactile, and true.
Super 8 and 16mm both offer that nostalgic, filmic magic, but each brings its own vibe. Super 8 feels like a home video from the ‘60s or ‘70s, with deep grain, motion blur, and soft flickers of light. It’s raw, warm, and wonderfully imperfect. 16mm, on the other hand, is twice the size, meaning sharper detail, finer grain, and a more polished, cinematic feel; perfect for couples who want something timeless and artful. Both formats are shot similarly, with each roll giving about three minutes of footage, and both are ideal for capturing that dreamy, nostalgic atmosphere only real film can deliver.