View allAll Photos Tagged kodak
A collaboration with the Mischievously talented Ginger Lorimatthews Resident. Thank you for the invitation lady. Do enjoy her perspective of "Night Out" pose by Ana Poses.
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Canon T70 Camera - FD 35-105 mm 1:3,5 Lens
KODAK Prof 100 135/36 film
Developed and scanned via a local lab.
Nikon N80 film camera (kodak film), digitally scanned with Nikon Z6. Converted with negative lab pro. Post processed with photoshop and DXO.
Image MKZ_1464
Lithprints on: Kodak Bromesko
9 papers, total of 65x65cm
Moersch SE 5
(images from old abandon glass negatives. Found on a flee market in France)
Chinon Infrafocus 35F-MA
Kodak ColorPlus 200
I tried cropping off that little area on the right to center it all - which changed the picture completely and ruined its inherent naturalness.
A series of images taken in and around Aarhus with my very first camera, the Kodak S100, which I got as a Christmas present from my parents in 1988 (when I was 10) and still own today.
It is a camera with a 35mm lens, one shutter speed (probably 1/100s or 1/60s), fixed focus, and three aperture settings. Has a built-in flash, but except for the flash it works without batteries (no meter). It has survived everything from family holidays in the 80s to interrail in the 90s, festivals, parties, you name it. Unbreakable, and the results are pleasingly lo-fi.
Yesterday I serviced a 1966 Kodak Signet 35 rangefinder camera and took it out for a test to verify focus, etc.
This photo was made on Astrum MZ3 film, which is basically some kind of Ortho Copy Film, repackaged. It has an effective speed of 3 ASA (no, that's not a typo!), so a tripod is pretty much mandatory.
For this test, I developed the film in FA-1027 at 1:14 for 5.5 minutes and got a very nice negative: punchy, but not blocked up. This frame was exposed for 100 seconds at f16.
This is supposedly a Tessar design lens, so its not surprising that its sharp at the smaller apertures. (Its not great at apertures below f5.6 &1/2 in my experience) So if you encounter a Signet 35 somewhere, don't scoff at it! That lens is mighty sharp when used with care and forethought! Click on the image and see it full size - remember; this is a 35mm negative!
Anyway, if you're looking for a fun, easy to use, "pocktable" 35mm rangefinder, the Signet 35 is well worth giving a go. I'll be selling this one if anyone if interested. Email me to inquire: bardenphotographics@gmail "dot" com
My one and only shot of Monaco.
I was underwhelmed, but the train ride to and from Nice was oh so pretty.
October, 2003
Konica 35mm
Kodak film
Is everyone seeing this? Am I coming up on your Flickrs? My view counts, likes, etc. have been way down since the weekend. Waiting to hear from Flickr.
The Kodak Signet 40 is a 35mm rangefinder camera produced in the USA from 1956 to 1959, featuring a distinct Art Moderne-inspired design. It boasts a 46mm f/3.5 Ektanon lens (often thorium glass), a Synchro 400 shutter (1/5–1/400 sec + B), and a bright, triangular spot-focusing rangefinder. It is known for being a solid, budget-friendly user camera.
The label inside the back cover of a Jiffy Kodak V P. The Jiffy Kodak V. P. is a Bakelite-bodied folding camera made by Kodak from 1935 to 1942.
"Macro Mondays" "Label"
This is the most basic version of the Kodak Tourist. It has a fixed focus Kodet f12.2 lens and a Kodon shutter (2 blade) with a fixed shutter speed of 1/50th of a second.
Photo: Sony NEX-5N + Super Takumar 50mm, f1.4