This is how you do flash with 110/16mm photography:
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The diabolical Minolta 16II flash photographer.
Best,
-Tim
This is how you do flash with 110/16mm photography:
![]()
The diabolical Minolta 16II flash photographer.
Best,
-Tim
Interesting, nice close up. What camera were you using for these?
Probably a QT; the file name indicates it was a test of 7266 Tri-X in reversal D-19. The QT and MG-s share most accessories, including close-up (80, 40, 25cm) diopters. The lens in the MG-s IS a touch better than the QT, so blue-tacking a #0 from the M16ii series onto it when requiring infinity is feasible. 1 out of 4 QTs I've landed have been fully functional (minus the meter--none have functioned correctly); 1 with a sticky shutter cock and 2 completely inoperable. Both of my MG-s examples are flawless, including the meter, when dialing in ~-1 stop to account for the increased modern battery voltage.
all of the Minolta 16 cameras' frame areas assume there will be at least one set of sprockets present. Obviously designed with reuse in mind.
Mg-s 250D f2.8 @ 1/30s in unnatural light, processed ECN-2 N+0. Hastily wet scanned on a V800 w/ auto-adjustments and manual black point. 2-3 stops underexposed judging from the negative.
Spot the remjet clouds...
View attachment 295335
I generally don't perform a pre-wash and remove the entirety of the remjet from the film base after the stop bath and prior to bleaching & fixing, in a tray. Those marks (purple-ish 'clouds' on the right of the frame) are from the base side of the film touching the emulsion side as I remove it from the reel. Usually I can avoid it, but it is quite tricky to get out of the emulsion when it happens. The same applies to 35mm Vision3 except its about 4x as filthy per frame.
I find any attempts to remove it in-situ via washing on the reel introduces a remjet 'snow' into the emulsion, still requires manual intervention for complete removal prior to bleach&fix to avoid contamination, and while it can 'fixed' by digital ICE scanning, seriously degrades the image quality. Using the official pre-wash formula and/or moving a wash to after the stop might be something to try but I'm not that fussed about it. It was meant to be removed by a purpose-built machine anyway... a real 1st world photographer's problem
1/60s shutter priority under artificial daylight, haphazardly dry scanned by wedging the unflattened film into one side of a 35mm holder. And Tri-x 7266 in D-19 reversal, digitized with a D850 with a reverse mounted nikkor 24mm af-d. There's a hotspot present due to insufficient masking of the postive.
View attachment 295336 View attachment 295337
Mg-s 250D f2.8 @ 1/30s in unnatural light, processed ECN-2 N+0. Hastily wet scanned on a V800 w/ auto-adjustments and manual black point. 2-3 stops underexposed judging from the negative.
Spot the remjet clouds...
View attachment 295335
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