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- Jun 21, 2003
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IMO, beginners should start with a manual 135 camera and shoot slide film. This will help them (force them) to understand proper metering and exposure compensation. Then, if they want to learn ultimate control in analog grayscale, get a 4x5 with one lens and Adam's ZS books.
35mm, sure but slides ? they cost like 20$ a roll when you include processing
they take a couple of weeks to get back from mall away processing if you don' thave a local
lab that does E6 // and probably not the best/easiest thing to develop oneself with no experience //
probably c41/ stragiht color is the best first film to shoot as long as as the person brings it to a place that
returns the film .. last i checked rite aid still returned film but its best to check //
I am not hater but this comparison is useless.. there are more films in the market, every works with different developer, no experience with acros and question like "why ilford produce 100iso and 125iso film... really????
yeah its kind of weird ilford has a 50 and 125 iso film/ at least the 125 doesn't auto delete the latent images if
you wait too long. what does experience with acros have to do with anything ? im not a hater either
but why does it matter if he has or doesn't hav experience with acros ? ive been shooting film since 1970
and i have very little experience with acros ... he dropped the film off at a pro lab, not everyone who
is going to try film wants or cares about 2 or 5 different types of developers and esoteric differences
between film stocks...
just watched it again, i liked the video. went to the site and saw the outtakes.
if i was a NOOB, definately useful.
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