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Hoosier Howdy

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macintux

Member
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Joined
Feb 2, 2024
Messages
13
Location
Indianapolis
Format
Medium Format
Greetings & salutations. I'm a photography dabbler from Indiana; got into film (almost exclusively medium format) a year ago and I've been accumulating cameras and wasted film ever since.

The cameras I shoot most often are a 3D-printed 6x17 (based on the Kraken design), a Yashica Mat 124G, and a Voigtländer Bessa.

Mainly I've been perusing the classifieds here, but LF is enough of a jump (especially financially) that I'll probably stick with MF. On the other hand, this Rochester (https://www.photrio.com/forum/threa...mera-lens-packard-shutter-film-holder.203236/) keeps nagging at me.


FP4-3-01.jpg
 
Welcome! Indiana is a great place. No such thing as wasted film, I love developing film, and printing. I'm a great fan of medium format, large format is great but can get expensive these days. Again Welcome!
 

It's a good price for a complete large format camera, but getting extra film holders might be difficult (since the camera was adapted to fit that, already adapted holder). It would make a swell portrait camera (if your sitter could keep still for a second). And you may have trouble getting film in that size. (I've never tried to get film that size, so I don't know.)
 
Welcome to Photrio! Please show us the cameras that you made.
 
Welcome to Photrio. I'm in Indiana, too. In Fort Wayne!

Fort Wayne inspired me to get into film photography.

Specifically, I was passing through and stopped at the museum of art, where I found a moving piece titled Joy, by Maggie Shannon, from her project following midwives during the height of the pandemic.


I have no idea how she shot it, but the incredibly rich textures of the print reminded me of large format photos I'd seen. I settled on medium format instead, bought the Yashica Mat soon after.
 
It's a good price for a complete large format camera, but getting extra film holders might be difficult (since the camera was adapted to fit that, already adapted holder). It would make a swell portrait camera (if your sitter could keep still for a second). And you may have trouble getting film in that size. (I've never tried to get film that size, so I don't know.)

Film itself is (relatively) easy, so long as I'm willing to buy Ilford (B&H has it, Delta 100), but that's most of what I shoot today anyway.

I really want a camera I can use outdoors, though, and while it looks like I could make it work, it would be a challenge.
 
Welcome to Photrio! Please show us the cameras that you made.
I can't take any credit for the 3D panoramic. It was purchased through Etsy, from a seller who licenses the design and makes them in a few different sizes.


IMG_0519.jpeg


This is one of my first shots, and remains my favorite.

john-panoramic002-reduced.jpeg
 
Welcome! Indiana is a great place. No such thing as wasted film, I love developing film, and printing. I'm a great fan of medium format, large format is great but can get expensive these days. Again Welcome!

Thanks. I miss oceans and mountains, but Indiana has a lot to offer.

I've been taking darkroom classes through the local art center, and I enjoy using the enlargers, but when I bought the 6x17 I realized I needed to get a scanner and start doing more digital printing. A shame, but there's definitely something to be said for digital.
 
I can't take any credit for the 3D panoramic. It was purchased through Etsy, from a seller who licenses the design and makes them in a few different sizes.


View attachment 361948

This is one of my first shots, and remains my favorite.

View attachment 361950

How are you scanning your 6x17 negatives? I have an old Fujica G617 I have an enlarger for black and white but I've used a cheap Canon flat bed scanner, actually works pretty well, for Fujichrome.
 
How are you scanning your 6x17 negatives? I have an old Fujica G617 I have an enlarger for black and white but I've used a cheap Canon flat bed scanner, actually works pretty well, for Fujichrome.

I picked up an Epson V700 flatbed scanner on eBay, and I've been pretty happy with a Logomography Digitaliza film holder I bought from Roberts.

I've never really figured out what each generation of Epson scanner offers over older ones, but the V700 seems to do fine.

I started out with a copy stand and my Canon Rebel, but the tedium and extra work stitching together even a 6x6 photo was ridiculous. I think I paid about the same for the copy stand as I did the V700; that was a mistake.
 
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