Комментарии:
nice one. maybe you could inspect the back with the torch and use sand paper to polish all places where the film is touching the plastics.
ОтветитьBeautiful work, great perseverance. I know that feeling with film photography
ОтветитьLove your work Jude. 👍🏼
ОтветитьGotta love it when a plan comes together. The last photo was worth the wait. Most enjoyable video, Jude.
ОтветитьDo you still have the Mamiya RZ67? Don't think I've seen a video of yours for some time featuring the RZ.
ОтветитьGreat video! Infectious energy. I have been waverting between a 6x17 adapter for my 4x5 or a dedicated 6x17 camera and you've certainly pushed me in one direction 😂
ОтветитьLast image, pure fire!
Btw was looking at that Da-Yi 6x12 back. It's between that and a linhof viewfinder, or fixing my car. We'll see what I'll put on the list for Santa this year ;-)
It's great that you showed human error and equipment issues as a factor, a lot of content creators would edit out anything that isn't perfect. Film photography is challenging and mistakes and technical problems happen. There is no delete button when using film. But challenges and adversity build character and skills and it's always good to show that a "failure" isn't really a failure. It's a lesson learned.
Ответитьthat last shot is a banger!
ОтветитьI disagree with pushing your film at night unless you are trying to handhold. If using a tripod there is no need to push. All you do by pushing is shrink the dynamic range of the film, ie, make it more contrasty. Pushing film does not make it more light sensitive and the increase in grain can be distracting. Plus, many labs don't offer push/pull processing for color.
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