Posts Tagged ‘Film’

Some film snaps…

Friday, October 29th, 2010

Not with the Bronica…not yet

Let’s get to some Serious Film Shootin’!

Wednesday, October 27th, 2010

Thankfully due to some side gigs that brought in some pocket change, I was able to step up from the Twin-lens medium format cameras that I had been shooting with.  Basically my choices came down to either Mamiya or Bronica, and either 6×6 or 6×7.  I decided to branch out from my love for the square format, and step up to the “Big Negative” the 6×7.  But I still hadn’t chosen between Mamiya or Bronica.  I had been leaning toward Bronica for a while, I liked the styling and lines of the camera.  I have a Mamiya C330, so I was familiar with the solid metal build of Mamiya cameras…and the weight.  This ultimately led me to go with the Bronica GS-1.  And of course I went to my first and sometimes my only place for used camera gear:  KEH!  I found this outfit, the body, eye level prism, standard 100mm lens, a 120 back, and the Speedgrip all for a nice price.  You really have to love how digital basically bottomed out film camera prices (most film camera prices – you still have to shell out some cash for a Hassie…), I’m anxious to run some film through it!

With the addition of the Speedgrip, it almost handles like a huge 35mm.  Even vertical handheld shots seem doable.

Film (Lubitel love)

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

Well not so much love, more like Lubitel flirting, it’s been so long since I’ve shot with it, I missed the focus on the first three shots I took with it on this night.  These two I nailed the focus pretty much; hey it’s a two element (if that) lens, only one stop down from wide open.  I wished my PC sync on my Yashica was working, it’s lens is crisp, and I would have loved to have shot it.  Plus if you’ve ever shot a Lubi, they can be pretty tough to nail the focus on without regular practice.  But there’s something about the way that these shots came out, the softness of film; combined with the Russian Glass of the Lubi, and the color palette of Portra 160.  And it was just fun using the Lubi in the studio!

Can’t wait to try something like this again….possibly with some new Bronica gear?  Or with a repaired 124g….

My 2010 Resolutions….

Thursday, April 1st, 2010

Okay, this is going to be a list my reso–actually, I’m tired of saying that word, let’s substitute goals.  Here is a list of goals that I want to accomplish this year.  Not in any particular order.  I know that we’re three four months into the year, but I’ve been late with a lot of things in the past; it’s how I rolled:

  • I didn’t get a cell phone until 1999, and I never had a pager; if I wasn’t at home you were going to talk to my answering machine

  • I didn’t start using digital until 3 years ago, and I bought a old D1X(which was 6 yrs old at that time)

  • I waited until age 33 to actually get serious and try to make my dream (photography for a living) a reality, why didn’t I try 10 years ago?

My 2010 Photography goals:


1.  Get physical with my imagery – Since these days so much is done digitally, alot of my photos just end up on my hard drive, or on this blog, nothing like the old days, when you had physical results from taking photographs.  You took photos,

You ended up with negatives or slides.   Some of those ended up in the form of prints


I want to make something physical – maybe put on my own show somewhere; something small, but something where I have an end to go along with the means.  Maybe I’ll do a photozine or a book, but something that I can hold in my hand, and in turn hand to someone.


2. Film – A while ago me and my wife were watching Kalifornia, in that movie Michelle Forbes is a photographer, and she spends the movie shooting with a Nikon F3 (I believe) and she asked me if I missed shooting film.  Even though I tailed off shooting film seriously over the last 10 years, it took me a little by surprise.  I did miss film somewhat, I recently ran a roll of slide film through my F4, I had forgotten how colors pop on slides!  So, I’m going to shoot more film this year, I’ve collected enough of it over the past 5 years that I haven’t shot

And I’ve accumulated more than enough film cameras…they need to be shot with.

3. Get project oriented – Come up with some projects that interest me, and then make them happen, not sitting around saying “I wish I could shoot, blah,blah, blah, maybe I’ll get to do that someday…”  Why does it have to be someday?  And when I start it, finish it.  What good is a project that you start, attack with full steam, and then just give up?  Even if it doesn’t work out like I envisioned – at least I can say, I finished….


4.  Keep a creative journal – this I’ve actually started:

and started: and started: and started


But it would be nice to keep it going, not write a page, or couple of pages, but actually have a book that I can come back to for inspiration.  And when I put ideas down in it…actually come back and try some of them


5. Take more personal photos -  life moves so fast it seems these days, the only way that we can remember the little details is to write it down, video it, or take pictures.  Like these of my wife and my niece decorating Easter cookies.

Something little now, but how are they going to feel about this moment looking back on these pictures in 10 years?  15 years? How am I going to feel?


6.  Network – get myself out there to other photographers, become part of the community.  It’s how you learn and how you find and create opportunities.


7.  And probably the most important thing on this list; getting comfortable with at some point I’m going to have to tell people that I’m a photographer.  Saying that phrase is heavy; there’s so much expectation attached to it.  You can read the books, take the workshops, the classes, do the TFCD work, do the photo zines, the 365 projects.  All that is so you can live it.  You can love it, because it’s what you are.  The moment you say that phrase, it’s what you do.