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- Feb 6, 2021
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Ahahaha, boomer alert. Here in the modern world we only use 1930-70's cameras!This is my late 19teens Kodak folding autographic brownie No.2.
That one has the one piece ground crystal, so barely, its like looking through a piece of frosted glass, but apparently they were like that from new. I have a later model from around the 30s and it has a fold flat viewfinder thats the same shape, but just has a normal mirror on a spring and its much better.Can you still use your "viewfinder"?
I Recently got some bulk 35mm. Just need to bother buying/woodworking the adapters. Once I've sacrificed some film I might consider 120. No decent way of scanning the negatives at the moment though.That one has the one piece ground crystal, so barely, its like looking through a piece of frosted glass, but apparently they were like that from new. I have a later model from around the 30s and it has a fold flat viewfinder thats the same shape, but just has a normal mirror on a spring and its much better.
I have a couple of 50s cameras too, another german made bellows "baldafix" that was 120, but originally would have came with a massive so you could could take half sized pictures and get twice as much photos out of it. I ran some plastic sheet through a desktop cnc router and cut some replacements, one being a 35mm for panorama shots.l (you get about 2 2/3 35mm frames per shot) must finish off the cartridge adapters and use it.
mainly i sperg about ww1 era stuff, i have a vest pocket camera too, that il make something up to cut down 120 film and roll my own. This leaves you with a strip of 16mm film, so i may as well buy a 16mm camera........
Did you use a tripod or did you just put it on a ledge or bench and set a timer (a perfectly acceptable alternative to a tripod for night photography if you're like me and don't want to carry around an extra bag for a tripod) or a remote shutter if you have one?Shot in a raw format with a rebel T2I, then exported with photoshop and I think it ruined the image a little bit, complete newbie and this was my first time experience with night-time photography.
I like to take pictures of things in nature for fun. The sky, critters, bugs, animals etc. I bought an older but nice camera a couple of years ago but I was just too tech regarded to understand how to use it to get the best results, so now I just point my phone at things and take pictures lol
Thank you! I don't think I used anything to help with the stillness in this picture, but I did for a lot of other photos I took that night. I'm still trying to learn how to shoot in manual mode, currently I just shoot in auto and I don't feel I'll get any better just letting the camera decide what to do. I'll do some research tomorrow and go out that night with proper manual settings. Ill your advice into account, again thank you!Did you use a tripod or did you just put it on a ledge or bench and set a timer (a perfectly acceptable alternative to a tripod for night photography if you're like me and don't want to carry around an extra bag for a tripod) or a remote shutter if you have one?
I think it came out pretty well, I like the colour in the reflections. You might want to try an even longer exposure setting next time if you want more detail and less grain on the bridge.
Like the other guy said, try shooting with a lower iso and longer shutter speed. Maybe you could try shooting higher up so that the lights are blocked by the edge of the bridge, this would have an interesting effect on the lighting and allow for a more evenly illuminated shot. Shooting directly into bright light sources will skew the exposure metering. Would you mind sharing the exposure data/exif of the picture?I'm still trying to learn how to shoot in manual mode
Sorry for getting to this late. Here it is.Like the other guy said, try shooting with a lower iso and longer shutter speed. Maybe you could try shooting higher up so that the lights are blocked by the edge of the bridge, this would have an interesting effect on the lighting and allow for a more evenly illuminated shot. Shooting directly into bright light sources will skew the exposure metering. Would you mind sharing the exposure data/exif of the picture?
3200 iso on an older camera is most likely what is causing all that grain. You could try using a tripod and setting a lower iso and using a longer shutter speed in manual. I haven't owned a Canon but I have heard a lot about Magic Lantern being useful to add more functionality etc. Also you could look into a cable release or an intervalometer if you wanted to take longer exposures with Bulb mode. Are you familiar with reading the exposure meter on your camera?Sorry for getting to this late. Here it is.
Congrats on the transition, next step is a drum scanner and a 4x5 lol. You should check out lomography.com , they have a really good community and you can see all kinds of film stocks and camera models people use. Do you have a local lab you get your dev and scan done or do you send it out? The pictures you shared look pretty sharp, im not sure the xray machine at the airport is powerful enough to do a lot of damage to film though. You might be interested in the Pentax 17 as it's a little cheaper to shoot half-frame sometimes. (36 exp roll is 72 shots on 1/2 frame).Getting good composition feels more difficult too. My shots feel much less dramatic. I have lots of frames that feel like the early days of snapshitting. I think its partially not being able to see the result, relying on post-processing by the phone camera for some, and being able to farm luck by sheer volume (if i take 1000 photos, one will surely be decent). Not to mention my shaky ass hands. For travel, it can be difficult to quickly get a good shot too. I'm getting better though.
I recently got a mini tripod though, polarizer, ND filter, and soon, a good flash.
Regardless, love my Nikon FM3A, and my Yashica T5. Love Portra 800 and Ektar 100.
That's the ticket. My phone always saves both. You can always edit the RAW later if you want to, but it's optional.Even those times that I do shoot RAW, I use the RAW + JPEG option so I have files that I can post quickly without needing to open a photo editor.
Did you pick the wrong file to attach? It looks like an upscaled 400x300 photo saved as JPG with quality set to 20.My pride and joy, my Minolta SRT-101. Finest Damn film camera I’ve ever used, takes razor sharp photos with the right lens. Got it for like 100 dollars on FB marketplace with three lenses.
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