Nuff
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Thats great!
Thanks.
Wonder if Yodobashi ships out? (will have to look up the translated details on the desktop)
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Unfortunately they don't. I have asked them last week.
Thats great!
Thanks.
Wonder if Yodobashi ships out? (will have to look up the translated details on the desktop)
Sent from Tap-a-talk
Thats great!
Thanks.
Wonder if Yodobashi ships out? (will have to look up the translated details on the desktop)
The first thing you should shoot is whatever film/developer combo you use in 35mm. It's really the only way to get a baseline comparison, so you can see what the format change does for you, without introducing other variables.
Yodobashi may not, but Japan Exposures does. However, their mark-up is a bit more than what you can get at Yodobashi.
This thread actually reminded me that I have some Fuji chemicals to try out. In Japan they are cheaper than Kodak or Ilford chemicals (as is the paper), but I'm a girl of habit, so for the most part have stuck to what I know, unless I can't get it here (for example, Photoflo is impossible to get, but Fuji's equivalent is Driwel, which works exactly the same). You may notice in the photos below another brand called Chugai: it's cheap and everywhere, even the small little mom and pop shops that still sell some film. I like the Fujibro paper, it's what I usually use for the postcard exchanges and to make contact/work prints. It's a fast paper and dries nice and flat. Here are a couple of old threads that I started about its lithability: (there was a url link here which no longer exists) (there was a url link here which no longer exists)
Fujifilm (and other products at Kyoto Yodobashi Camera: not nearly as good as Osaka or Tokyo, but better than most cities)
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Quick snaps of part of my own stash:
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I haven't seen any such at all.Wow, have not seen a store with stock like that in a long long time.
We all have our favorite films. My suggestion is to shoot a little of everything and find what you like. You have a nice camera to shoot it with. A Hasselblad is a joy to use.
Wow!
Moose, it looks more like this is what is sustaining Fuji! (and the film market!)
Makes me kick myself for not having explored the film camera stores cos they had "old cameras".
I am checking the Fujibro paper out now.
I wonder what the experience with ordering from Japan Exposures is like.
I haven't seen any such at all.
This.
So, I picked up on the idea shared by many of you to start using the same film that I've experienced on 35mm. Still, I was thinking that most of my medium format photography would be firmly resting on a tripod, so I would concentrate on slower film. And, I want Fuji Pro 400h. Thus, I ordered 10x TMax 100, 5x Ektar and 5x 5x Pro 400h. Now, after a few days, I find myself doing a lot of handheld anyways, so I'm ordering a bunch of Tri-X.
analoguey could you post a hi res scan of a shot you handheld at 1/8 of a second? I would be fascinated to see how sharp it looks. I find even 1/30 on a tripod with the 90mm lens (its mirror-up function is broken) is sometimes a little shakey. Certainly 1/15 seems to be a crapshoot. With my other lenses on mirror up of course there is no problem.
Analoguey: 1/4s in exposure time without a tripod? Do you have a third leg?![]()
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