View allAll Photos Tagged Films
Taken many years ago with an awful Pentax 100mm-300mm lens.
Kodak color slide scan
I'm finding that scanning old film leads to a nightmare of spotting dust and black spots due to bad storing conditions.
A Film Noir heavy contrast black and white edit for this industrial site in North Vancouver. I wanted to bring out the subtle mountain tops in the back rather than a full black sky.
One of the biggest challenges of shooting film is that there are too many things that could go wrong during the shooting process. On the other hand, it actually makes you become more discipline before hitting the shutter. When you have a scene like this, you only have a small time window to capture it before the light and colors start to fade away. I have decided to go back to film because I didn't take photography seriously in the past. Only until I picked up my first DSLR in the late 2005, had I become more serious. The chemicals and the emulsion involved are fascinating to me. But I understand the underlying challenges and I am willing to accept them for my new journey.
Film: Kodak Portra 400
Camera: Voigtlander Bessaflex TM
Lens: Carl Zeiss Distagon T* 35mm F2 ZS
A collector's collection of old Chinese film prints. Expired Fujicolor 100 Film (Expired Date: 2009-12)
Filming of Rustin, the movie about Bayard Rustin, at the LIncoln Memorial. The crowd is listening to Martin Luther King Jr.'s speech and cheering.
we are all doing the very best we can at any given moment. here’s to that being enough.
(from my ‘walking in campbell’ series)
108:365 December 17th
-----------------------------------
I love my basement.
Painted the posters myself.
A few weeks ago i got a roll of 35mm to use to slowly get back into shooting some film this year. I used an old Minolta P/S. Here's a few results from it. I have an old (new) to me Mamiya 645 that i will shoot with next. All things considering, they weren't too bad
FUJIFILM ISO 400
Color Negative Film for 35mm