Marauder, a wood hull commercial fishing vessel built in 1948. Just a few years older than the Canon lens used to take the photo. Pillar Point Harbor, Half Moon Bay, California.
Leica M5, Canon 50mm f/1.5 LTM, Ultrafine eXtreme 400, developed in LegacyPro L110 at 1:31 for 5.5 minutes.
helimat wrote:
Here's a few from my short lived time with the Olympus Pen FT. I can see how this camera inspires diptychs! 40/1.4 + Expired Kodak Gold 400
Desmolicious wrote:
Just loaded my FT w/ Kodak ProImage 100..
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helimat wrote:
nice
I'm just loading up my Rollei A110 with Lomo Tiger
I like the way you think.
Dropping off my film from the FT. I've actually been using it to shoot triptychs - so I get 24 shots from a 36 exp roll. It's perfect for that as the frame spacing is even. What's cool about using it like that is that you can have a different point of focus between the three images, which can make for a very interesting picture.
Dropping off my film from the FT. I've actually been using it to shoot triptychs - so I get 24 shots from a 36 exp roll. It's perfect for that as the frame spacing is even. What's cool about using it like that is that you can have a different point of focus between the three images, which can make for a very interesting picture.
That's a great idea. And impressive that you managed to shoot 72 frames in that time period!
The Pen FT definitely intrigues me, but I told myself I am going to try to limit how many systems I have on the go at once. Of course, by my own rules that doesn't include fixed-lens cameras. Is there one of the fixed-lens Pens that would be recommended?
Here's a few from the 67 + 75/2.8 + Ilford XP2. An underrated film IMO, despite the C41 weirdness
helimat wrote:
That's a great idea. And impressive that you managed to shoot 72 frames in that time period!
The Pen FT definitely intrigues me, but I told myself I am going to try to limit how many systems I have on the go at once. Of course, by my own rules that doesn't include fixed-lens cameras. Is there one of the fixed-lens Pens that would be recommended?
Not a recent photo, but the early Pen and Pen S cameras are excellent. It's just a simple zone focus viewfinder camera, with no meter and fully mechanical. Not too expensive, and great for carry as a second camera. You can burn through 72 frames quicker by doing "Pen-O-Ramas".
dourbalistar wrote:
Not a recent photo, but the early Pen and Pen S cameras are excellent. It's just a simple zone focus viewfinder camera, with no meter and fully mechanical. Not too expensive, and great for carry as a second camera. You can burn through 72 frames quicker by doing "Pen-O-Ramas".
Babylon 13 is Orwo 21 (markings on it say that), and it is a really old school vintage look film. Pretty much no anti-halation layer so almost all the images have a slightly hazy look. Also seems very soft/prone to scratching.