Showing posts with label ektar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ektar. Show all posts

Friday, January 24, 2014

Canon 1000f - Kodak Ektar 100 film


Almost finished my film reviews and today it's another no brainer combo, my Canon 1000f using Ektar film. 
You might notice these recent photos below!


STATS
29 keeps 7 fails

Fail Reasons
The fail reasons were not having a fast enough shutter for pet photography - can't believe I keep forgetting that :p I also had a couple of shots overexposed and a couple underexposed

Things to Remember
Using an aperture of 3 or more for portraits really helps with focus issues (thanks Dani again!).
Using AV on this camera at night with the built in flash left some happy accidents of light trails :)
The flash was able to exposure our faces but the shutter which stayed open for what felt like a minute let in all those pretty light streaks :) Also remembering to overexpose by two stops seems to be the winning formula!

I feel like I've learned a lot over the last year or so and am super excited to keep learning and experimenting :)
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Friday, January 17, 2014

Canon 3 - Ektar 100


I'm back on that film review train and this time it's my Canon eos 3 camera with Kodak Ektar 100 film. I think this is a no brainer combination for returning good results :) Quality camera, with quality lenses and quality film - ticking all those good boxes!


I don't have the actual stats on how many shots turned out from this roll but all those 'a film photo a day' shots I posted whilst I was in Singapore were from that roll and if memory serves me it was a happy batch of film. If I want predictable photos I'll shoot with this combo knowing also that Ektar does some nice colours for landscape shots :)
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Saturday, January 11, 2014

Film Christmas

Before it's officially too late to stop posting Christmas photos, here are some shots from a roll of film I recently got developed. I used my Canon 1000f with Ektar film (will review soon!)


You may notice, from the above picture, I like to clash at Christmas! Thanks Dani for the 'upping the aperture' tip to get my film shots in focus, seems to be working, hurrah!


Ben and I went to my family for Christmas lunch, Ben commented it was a very Australian Christmas spread; cold ham, fresh prawns, chicken, salads and of course Bon bons!


At night we headed to my friend's shane place, they have a wood fire oven, so we all made our own pizza and had a pizza-off, my pizza didn't do so great because the pumpkin was slightly undercooked...oops!

And then Ben and I ended the night by getting silly but we're always silly, so that's not so odd :p Ben went back to work the other day, so it's back to being boyfriend-less for another six weeks, nooooo! I've learnt to adjust to him being away (sorta) but it's still sucks, I miss my buddy :(
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Saturday, December 21, 2013

OM1 - Ektar 100

I get to show you where my love of film photography really began :) I won't go into the whole story as you can read it over here but essentially it involved being given my Grandma's Olympus OM1 after she passed away about ten years ago, being really inspired and then letting the camera sit in a box until 2011. I actually thought the camera was broken from years of neglect and perhaps that's where my film photography story would have stopped but my brother was the one that got me to develop that "one more roll" and I've been taking film photos ever since.





My Dad like his Mum (it's was her OM1) is also into photography and has really taught me a lot - he was also the one who suggested I try the kodak Ektar 100 and for pretty much a year I used that solely. I have a lot of fond memories of the OM1/Ektar combo and I'd happily recommend it to anyone :) Unfortunately in August last year I slipped on ice in Tasmania, dropped the camera and afterwards it no longer metered. A simple fix would just be to get an external light metre which I plan to do anyway, so no biggie, it shall live once more :) I thought I'd share some of my photos I took! I have hundreds but I've tried to condense them down into a snap shot for you guys!


The Ektar film is great because it's a high quality film without the excessive price tag of kodak Portra. I get a big bundle of it from eBay and it turns out to be under ten dollars for a roll which is nice :)
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Monday, December 16, 2013

135bc Holga - Ektar 100

We're moving onto the toy cameras now, which in some ways are my favourite and in other ways make me want to cry with their unpredictable nature :p I picked up the 135bc holga because I wanted a cheap holga that took 35mm film, my other holga which takes medium format film was a pain in the arse to find processing for.   Luckily processing is much more available especially in the online world than it was in 2005, so I definitely want to get back into playing around with my old holga! but anyways I digress!


The 135bc is the cheapest holga you can get it's all plastic and the "bc" bit just means it has forced vignetting (vin-yet-ing) so instead of the black edges occurring naturally on the film the 135bc has black inserts to stop the corners being exposed. Some people might find this cheating or tacky but I'm all for it :p

STATS
14 keeps - 12 Fails (+10 never exposed)
Fails Reasons
I tried googling to see why 10 frames never exposed I thought maybe I had left the cap on and the shutter had clicked in my bag but then I read this guy's suggestion about never putting in a roll of 36 exposure because there is too much film being wound onto the spool and could cause you to break your camera. Maybe it just didn't wind on? Mystery ... next time I'm going to stick with 24 exposure film just in case it was the 36 roll issue!

The other reasons for the fails were that people's heads were cut off - the view finder doesn't accurately describe what will translate onto the film.  I also found myself with lots of underexposed shots - this camera needs lots of light! It does have two nifty features for helping the light situation, firstly, you can change the shutter speed to "b" which basically means as long as you are holding the shutter release button down it will stay open thus letting in lots of light but also may result in blurry pictures unless you are using a tripod! The second is that some toy cameras won't let you take more than one exposure once you hit the shutter relase button but the holga 135 will, which means you can take heaps of exposures on one frame equalling lots of light! The photos above I took in Singapore - for the overcast days I used triple exposure and even on the fairly sunny day I still used double exposure (the lilly pads bottom right)

Things to remember: Aim high when shooting to avoid cutting off people's heads! Use 24 exposure rolls and only use on super sunny days( I'd even double exposure on super sunny days!)  Finally  make sure what setting you're on, if you're on the bulb 'b' setting and you just want to be on the normal 'n' setting this could mean a lot of your photos come out blurry - depending on how long that finger of yours lingers on the shutter release button. I'm actually still not 100% in love with holgas I find they produce soft images but if you're aware of this you can definitely use it to your advantage! I also have a flash for my holga which I'll talk about later as it's an add on I love and would recommend :)
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Friday, September 13, 2013

Pandanus Tree - a film photo a day

Ahh the good old Pandanus tree amusing visitors and local alike for years with there thick prop roots sometimes resembling a certain male appendage :p

 Note: Taken with Canon EOS 3 using Ektar 100 film
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Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Cactus - a film photo a day

The Cacti enjoying some morning sun :)

 Note: Taken with Canon EOS 3 using Ektar 100 film
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Monday, September 9, 2013

Flowers - a film photo a day

Always a sucker for flowers :)

 Note: Taken with Canon EOS 3 using Ektar 100 film
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Sunday, September 8, 2013

Pot Plants - a film photos day

Ben's Mum really loves plants :)

 Note: Taken with Canon EOS 3 using Ektar 100 film
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Saturday, September 7, 2013

Lace Curtains - a film photo a day

I did cheat and convert my colour film to b&w but that's allowed right :p
  Note: Taken with Canon EOS 3 using Ektar 100 film
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Friday, September 6, 2013

Roses - a film photo a day

Might have seen these guys before but this time in film form :)
  Note: Taken with Canon EOS 3 using Ektar 100
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Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Canon EOS 3

A good few months back something totally awesome happened to me, but it wasn't without it's drama!  I pulled into my favourite op shop and spied a gentleman, over in the camera section, picking up and looking at my dream camera! My heart starting racing, I've been wanting a canon film camera that could fit all my lenses for yonks now! The guy was looking at the camera for what felt like eternity before FINALLY putting it down, hurrah! I was so happy (I probably not so subtly rushed over) and $3 later she was mine.


 Now the thing is film cameras usually do still require a battery so when I turned on the beast nothing happened, which maybe explained the $3 price tag and not the $200ish price they go for. It looked in awesome condition though so I was secretly hoping all would be swell with just a new battery. I think we know where this story goes...yup, a new battery did the trick :) Such good timing too because I've been neglecting film ever since my Olympus and I came crashing down on slippery ice last year in Tassie. Let's just say that fall didn't do good things :(

So the Canon EOS 3 is awesome, I've only shot one roll (Ektar 100) so far and I've got a roll of Kodak portra 400 currently in it - which I'm going to use up on my trip :) The nice thing about this camera, is it auto loads (excites the laziness in me), is super easy to take double or more exposures on it and I can use all my lenses on it :)

I think if I'm giving anyone starting out in photography advice, I'd say the lens play a much greater part than the body :) I know that seems crazy since I've just been raving about this body, but film is in a slightly different ball game for me, as a large part of what makes film lovely is from the actual film itself :) It's nice not to have to play around in LR or photoshop to get the colours just right! 


So tomorrow I'm off to Singapore, weeeee, I'm quite literally wearing all my clothes on board the flight so I can fit all my camera gear, he he he, I couldn't stop giggling when I told Ben this plan.  I also made sure to do a trial run of wearing all my clothes at once, just to make sure I didn't look too silly :P

Whilst I'm away (a week and a bit) I'm going to share a film photo a day, just so my blog doesn't get too many cobwebs! See you guys on the flip side with hopefully lots of photos to share!
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