Analog b/w large format photography.

Erik Frans Woudstra works only analog, which is still far superior to digital photography.
For landscape photography he usually works with a 4x5" fieldcamera and a 6x12 panorama camera.
For macro photography of plants, flowers etc. he uses a large 8x10" view camera
with a 90cm. bellows and 4x5" and 13x18cm reduction backs.
For portrait usually a 4x5" twin lens reflex camera or a 6x7 cm SLR camera.
For still life a view camera with 8x10" and 13x18 cm backs.
For reportage a 6x7 cm SLR camera and a 6x9cm range finder camera.
For available light in churches etc. he still uses sometimes 35 mm camera's
Although the analog manual enlarging on baryta paper is still the golden standard in b/w photography, he now usually scans his negatives.
Because of the dusty environment in the Spanish sierra's this is necessary.
It is much easier and faster to clean up the negatives digitally.
The file size is limited only by programs like photoshop, tiff etc. to 2 Gpx.
With large format photography digital prints of 100x125 cm and much larger of stunning quality are easily possible.
- Straight, without interpolation -
For a print of 100x125cm you need 500mpx.
Digital cameras can never produce a file that big.