Good to know, though I haven’t got anything wider than 28mm.if you use a 14 mm full size equivalent lens or lower, virtually everything is hyperfocal at F4, no futzing required
Good to know, though I haven’t got anything wider than 28mm.if you use a 14 mm full size equivalent lens or lower, virtually everything is hyperfocal at F4, no futzing required
I am mostly trying this to improve my skill at taking 'snapshots' outside, without standing there like a dope futzing with focus.
I've had decent luck manually focusing (I am just slow at it), but lately I've been trying to take more rapid, candid shots as I walk around, so I've been reading up on street photography techniques and zone focusing.The hyperfocal distance guide on the lens that you asked about is helpful for landscapes and such, and if you wanted to pre-set a general focus range if you're going to be shooting more distant objects outdoors with smaller apertures, but for the most part you'll want to precisely focus manually even for "snapshots."
this thread isn’t about movies, it’s about analogue photography. using a film camera instead of digital.Has anyone seen the movie " Athena " ?? this movie is a pure masterclass. The movie was kinda new experience for me.
You might want to try this forum.Has anyone seen the movie " Athena " ?? this movie is a pure masterclass. The movie was kinda new experience for me.
To me, that looks like it's flat due to processing, not the original exposure.
How do you agitate when you're in the developer? Flat negs and what looks like overdeveloped streaks (along the top of the frame) come from insufficient agitation, that could be at least part of your issue.
It never occurred to me before, but winter (we have very snowy winters) really limits the advantages of color film but also provides stark contrasts that can look good in B&W - thinks like icicles and snowy forests. Came to that (I know, obvious ) realization on my own after shooting some color in the winter...most of the shots looked blah except for a couple that included people in super colorful clothing outdoors.I joined a "Month of Film" challenge for May where we will be given prompts to shoot a roll of film over the month. I haven't done any film since Christmas, so I think this will be a good segue back into summer shooting. If we had had any snow this winter, I was going to do some BW rolls, but our weather was just gray and bleak all winter (although relatively mild) so I didn't want to waste film for boring stuff.
But I love shooting spring/summer/fall on film and am excited to get back at it.
Well, you know, I'm not overly precise in most of my photography, and this roll is going through a Holga, so not looking for fine art quality (although Holga can be a fine art in its own way).I’ve made it before and tried it.
Maybe it’s the chemist coming out in me, but I disliked some of the imprecision in it(especially given the variability of things like different brands and that much is measured volumetrically).
I had a bunch of back channel communication and note sharing with someone on Pnet a few years ago. He theorized that the active reducing agent was actually caffeic acid, and I did some quick experiments that told me he was correct and actually couldn’t find that caffeine made any meaningful difference. I started working on a formula of mostly sodium carbonate and caffeic acid, but never got it to where I was totally happy. It probably could work, but life happened and I haven’t revisited it.
Short answer though is that I personally wouldn’t bother with the standard instant coffee formula but if you want to experiment it’s worth a shot.
There is a home brew formula out there to make Rodinol from Tylenol and sodium hydroxide(lye). I’ve used it and been very happy-to the point that I found it interchangeable with commercial Rodinol. That’s a great developer in and of itself with much higher acuity(at the expense of contrast-which can be tamed with dilution) and apparent grain. It’s not a developer I’d use all the time, although some people use it exclusively to great effect. You can also do stand development with it. It has seemingly unlimited shelf life too.
It's like a dream come true
This is the best thing ever.
Freestyle has HC-110 for $44. Sounds expensive but it makes 32 liters of working developer. So it cost like 60 cents per roll. l110 seems cheaper but a $16 bottle only makes 8 liters.I haven't been paying close attention, but I went shopping today for a bottle of HC-110 developer and learned, to my consternation, that production of HC-110 has been 'paused' or potentially even stopped indefinitely...I can't find definitive information but in any case it is not readily available anymore except at an inflated price. I have learned to develop using HC-110 exclusively and was just getting the hang of it, which makes this especially vexing for me.
Question: have any of you used the various HC-110 'clones' like FPP-110 or LC110 ? most reviews seem positive.
If I were more adventurous I'd follow @mollyc 's lead and use coffee, but I'm not at that level yet. If HC-110 is being permanently phased out I suppose I may simply end up switching to Ilford chemistry and re-learn a new process. Though I recognize there are a number of other B&W developers out there.
EDIT: Also, does anyone have experience with CineStill's DF96 monobath chemistry? It seems very convenient and economical, and works well with the Tri-X and HP5, which I have been shooting often.
Oh, wild. I just bought HC-110 when I did my caffenol experiment; I was too anxious to wait an extra day for the HC110 so did caffenol while I waited for delivery. I honestly couldn't really tell a big difference in negatives between the two.I haven't been paying close attention, but I went shopping today for a bottle of HC-110 developer and learned, to my consternation, that production of HC-110 has been 'paused' or potentially even stopped indefinitely...I can't find definitive information but in any case it is not readily available anymore except at an inflated price. I have learned to develop using HC-110 exclusively and was just getting the hang of it, which makes this especially vexing for me.
Question: have any of you used the various HC-110 'clones' like FPP-110 or LC110 ? most reviews seem positive.
If I were more adventurous I'd follow @mollyc 's lead and use coffee, but I'm not at that level yet. If HC-110 is being permanently phased out I suppose I may simply end up switching to Ilford chemistry and re-learn a new process. Though I recognize there are a number of other B&W developers out there.
EDIT: Also, does anyone have experience with CineStill's DF96 monobath chemistry? It seems very convenient and economical, and works well with the Tri-X and HP5, which I have been shooting often.