Wow! Thanks for detailing the process. I have the Sharpen AI software but not the other. Your results are really good though so I'll investigate further.
A few more from the Canon 35AF ML. I should probably work on the light seals on this camera. While I saw no light leaks from this first roll, the seals are all gummed up and deteriorating.
rji2goleez wrote:
I'm diggin this film but it's limited in bright conditions at box speed
Great shots with this film; as you noticed I posted some shots of it up above pushed to 1600 and I have another roll that I'll shoot at box speed. I'm reserving it for morning and evening, or indoors in natural light (love the dog on the rug shots!). I did try taking some concert photos with it just to see how it handles tungsten and other non-daylight-temperature lights and as predicted it becomes very yellow. I could put a filter on to adjust if I try that again but I prefer to just shoot B&W at concerts...it's easier.
bjhurley wrote:
Great shots with this film; as you noticed I posted some shots of it up above pushed to 1600 and I have another roll that I'll shoot at box speed. I'm reserving it for morning and evening, or indoors in natural light (love the dog on the rug shots!). I did try taking some concert photos with it just to see how it handles tungsten and other non-daylight-temperature lights and as predicted it becomes very yellow. I could put a filter on to adjust if I try that again but I prefer to just shoot B&W at concerts...it's easier.
I wasn't sure what to expect but at ISO 800 I was looking forward to shooting a sunset. This is a great film for that!
Wow -- you can take 3 shots in a row to demonstrate Riley's emotion without him closing his eyes! You're obviously shooting him in ambient light.
My dog was a fast learner. I was able to take ONE shot of him using a flash. ONE. He was a fast learner -- on every subsequent photo his eyes were closed. Whenever he saw me coming with the camera he would close his eyes.
coralnut wrote:
Wow -- you can take 3 shots in a row to demonstrate Riley's emotion without him closing his eyes! You're obviously shooting him in ambient light.
My dog was a fast learner. I was able to take ONE shot of him using a flash. ONE. He was a fast learner -- on every subsequent photo his eyes were closed. Whenever he saw me coming with the camera he would close his eyes.
Yup no flash. The advantage of using ISO 800 film indoors! The camera still wanted to use flash but I turned it off.