horse chestnut
Taken using homemade redscale film with the Olympus XA2 camera that I previously used in week 49 of my 52 film cameras in 52 weeks project:
Redscale is the name given to a technique of shooting photographic film where the film is exposed from the wrong side, i.e the emulsion is exposed through the base of the film. Normally, this is done by winding the film in upside-down into an empty film canister. Depending on the type of film used, the resulting colours seem to range from maroon, to red, to orange, to yellow.
The film is Kodak ColorPlus from Poundland, with three stops exposure compensation. Developed in Tetenal C41 chemistry.
horse chestnut
Taken using homemade redscale film with the Olympus XA2 camera that I previously used in week 49 of my 52 film cameras in 52 weeks project:
Redscale is the name given to a technique of shooting photographic film where the film is exposed from the wrong side, i.e the emulsion is exposed through the base of the film. Normally, this is done by winding the film in upside-down into an empty film canister. Depending on the type of film used, the resulting colours seem to range from maroon, to red, to orange, to yellow.
The film is Kodak ColorPlus from Poundland, with three stops exposure compensation. Developed in Tetenal C41 chemistry.