Our foster kitty, he has been gone now for a few weeks to a forever home.
the devil spawn puppy
and our faithful and well behaved grown up dog, Noah
Film was Fuji c200. Lens was ef 50/1.8 on the cat, ef 28-80 on the dogs, camera was cheapie canon rebel 2000. Developed at home with a unicolor c-41 kit
The local camera shop let me borrow a Rollei 35 TE over the weekend so I burned a roll of Portra 400. Don't know that I care for the film much, and the light was flat and grey all weekend, but got a few decent results out of it.
Mathieu18 wrote:
The local camera shop let me borrow a Rollei 35 TE over the weekend so I burned a roll of Portra 400. Don't know that I care for the film much, and the light was flat and grey all weekend, but got a few decent results out of it.
Fantastic images with the Rollei 35 Matthieu - very tempted to try this little camera now.
I don't usually use 35mm film but could not resist buying for a Minox GT-E that had been incorrectly listed on ebay for £20 UKP. Scans below are from Ektar 100 scanned in with my Nikon Coolscan 9000
Likewise, great shots Nico. I don't really use 35mm film either. It's always fighting with me. But they wanted to know if the camera worked and I wanted to play with a new toy! It was fun to use, its a different experience with zone focusing and odd framing lines. Still I think I'll stick to my TLR and HP5 film.
Fantastic images from "TooManyShots" love the composition and tonality from FP4 and your DSLR scanns.
A few studies in texture taken with a Rolleifles SL66 (apart from the last one with a Pentax 67) all with TriX in XTOL stock scanned with my Nikon Coolscan 9000
Love re-discovering old negatives that I had written off because they were either damaged / too scratched or where I was just not experienced enough to print them properly in the wet darkroom. Scan from a 20 year old negative Agfa APX25 in Rodinal / mamiya C330 that was damaged in a very dusty negative dryer but Photsohop and a lot of spotting and curves have brought back to live to what my original vision was...