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Canon AE-1 Program Film Camera + Kodak Colorplus 200 ISO Film and Vivitar Telephoto Lens. Light meter unused.
An Ilford HP5+ exposed for 800 ISO film with my Zorki 1 type D (year 1955), Lyon, France, February 5, 2023.
The Zorki camera was loaded with a 36-exposure Ilford HP5+ film, with its leader trimmed for old Leica's. During operations the Industar-22 lens was equipped with a 36mm push-on 1A filter and a generic metal cylindric shade hood.
Expositions were determined for 800 ISO using a Minolta Autometer III with a 10° finder for selective measurements privileging the shadow areas.
Typically the shutter exposure time was 1/200s with diaphragm of F/5.6 to f/11 for a quite cloudy weather.
Quai Saint-Vincent, February 5, 2023
69001 Lyon
France
After exposure, the film was processed using Adox Adonal (= Agfa Rodinal) developer at dilution 1+25, 20°C for 8 min according to development data for pushing the HP5+ film to 800 ISO. The film was then digitalized using a Sony A7 body adapted to a Minolta Auto Bellows III and a Minolta Slide Duplicator using a lens Minolta Bellow Macro Rokkor 50mm f/3.5 at a reproduction ratio of 1:1. The reproduced RAW files obtained were processed in LR prior the the final JPEG editions.
All views of the film are presented in the dedicated album either in the printed framed versions and unframed full-size jpeg.
About the camera and the lens:
This camera is a practically mint sample of Zorki 1 arrived to me in Lyon, France, January 10, 2023.
The camera looked exiting from the KMZ factory in USSR almost 70 years later spent in a time capsule ... with almost no traces of use. According to a custom receipt of July 28, 1955, signed in Vienna, Austria, the camera body and lens are the original matched ones. As for the original FED, FED-Zorki and Zorki's ("ФЭД", "ФЭД-Зоркий", „Зоркий“), the Zorki 1 was a straight legal copy of the Oskar Barnack Leica II after the cancelation of German camera patents following the end of WWII.
This Zorki 1 is a type D model PM1115 (year 1955 according sovietcams.com/index7584.html). Type D Zorki's were produced from 1953 to 1955 in about 250.000 units with serial numbers ranging from #470.000 to (in 1955) #55 45.000. The original lens of this Zorki units is an collapsible lens Industar-22 1:3.5 f=5cm.
In the rear pocket of the ever-ready leather bag was still deposited the Austrian custom receipt from 1955 and a film label of Agfa negative-color CN17 likely from the 60's.
White Rhododendrons: HDR (from negative scan) - Kodak Cameo Motor AF with collapsible flash and fixed 34 mm f/4.5 Ektanar with Fuji 400 ISO Superia X-TRA Film - Photographer Russell McNeil PhD (Physics) lives in Nanaimo, British Columbia where he works also as a writer and a personal trainer.
ISO 400 @ 7.1 Three flashes 1st in ktichen around corner ceiling wall bounce @1/2 power 2nd mid frame on 1/64 just to give the fire place some life. slight CL and forward ceiling bounce 1/2 power. It was raining outside so no point in pulling the windows any further.
This is a quick ISO test for my new Nikon D300 under normal room light.
Test conducted using fixed exposure and apreture settings while changing in ISO speed.
Feel free to add me as a contact if you wish to see image full size.
Settings:
Shutter 1/15
Aperture F5
ISO 6400
ISO 100 ~ 18mm ~ f22 @ 10s
Early morning at the Shorncliffe Pier, I was hoping for a more visually appealing sunrise with perhaps a few clouds, but hey... what can you do?
Spring Study No. 8 (Dogwood Blossoms): HDR (from negative scan) - Nikon F90X with Nikkor 35mm-80mm 1:4.0-5.6 Zoom & 400 ISO Fuji Film - Photographer Russell McNeil PhD (Physics) lives in Nanaimo, British Columbia where he works also as a writer and a personal trainer.
Test photo shot at ISO 12800 with my new Nikon D750. The camera's native ISO range is 100-12800 according to the specs. Not much noise at such a high ISO and image quality is still good. Lens used was a Nikkor AF-D 50 mm f/1.8.
© 2014 CP Cheah. All rights reserved.
October Hues - 12 (of 22) - Nikon F90X with Sun DC-1 MC 35-200mm F3.8-5.3 Macro Zoom & Fuji ISO 400 35mm Film & Polarizer - Photographer Russell McNeil PhD (Physics) lives on Vancouver Island, where he works as a writer.
ISO - 100
Shutter Speed - 1/15s
Aperture - f/3.5
Focal Length - 18mm
No flash - no tripod - natural light only
Can't believe I managed to take this without a tripod and still a little shaky from a panic attack earlier!!
Celebrating the holidays with festive music and holiday songs. Holiday Pops in the Heartland truly is a community affair, as the ISO is joined by the Bloomington-Normal Youth Symphony, Springfield Youth Performance Group, and the Twin Cities Ballet Company. But that's not all! The ISO will perform the music to Chris van Allsburg's Polar Express featuring Bass Baritone Robert Cantrell. Great fun for the entire family, young and old! Performed Friday, December 20, 2019 at the Bloomington Center for the Performing Arts, Bloomington, IL. Photo by David Fitch.
pOco a pocO boi besandO (K) el dulce miel de tu boca
con el miedo que me arropa pq no nos vean aqi
lentamente boi despacio vas quitandote la ropa
de repente como loca te abalanzas sobre mi (6)
infieles todo que se ecuentra en el amor haciendo
mientras sus parejas estan durmiendO
y al dia siguiente me abla mi conciencia y no me deja vivir
no es que ama el vicio del pecado seguimos cayendo
en la cama a fuego como un infierno
sentenciame dios mio el dia del juicio pero ten piedad de mi (A)
no tenemos la culpa de amarnos asi (8) !
somos seres humanos jugando a mentir
enfrentando el destino
solo hay dos caminos amar o morir (u.u)
no tenemos la culpa del daño y el mal
que a nuestras parejas podamos causar (77)
nos veremos mañana a la misma hora en el mismo lugar :)
NO TENEMOS LA CULPA (8) !
ISO dial on the back of my old Mamia 645 Super which I stupidly sold last summer.
Handheld with natural light.