SilvergrainClassics is an international quarterly print magazine covering all aspects of analogue film photography. Each 100-page issue offers a mix of portfolios printed on book-quality paper, gear discussion and methods, and insider news — published by photographers for photographers who have chosen to work with film in a digital age.
The magazine's audience is a community of practitioners who use film not out of nostalgia but out of conviction — people who believe that the analogue process produces results that digital cannot replicate, and who are willing to invest the time, skill, and patience that film demands. SilvergrainClassics serves this community with the technical depth and visual quality it deserves, treating analogue photography not as a relic but as a living, evolving practice.
The name refers to the silver halide grains that form the basis of photographic film — the fundamental physical substance that makes the image possible. It is a fitting title for a magazine devoted to the material reality of photography: the chemistry, the light, the paper, and the irreplaceable experience of watching an image emerge in a darkroom tray.