provoke1968
Member
using point and shoots like the ricoh gr1s. only caps out at 3200 iso. some of his work seems to be higher iso with no data in the shadows at all. how does one acheive this look using point and shoot cameras?
using point and shoots like the ricoh gr1s. only caps out at 3200 iso. some of his work seems to be higher iso with no data in the shadows at all. how does one acheive this look using point and shoot cameras?
how does one acheive this look using point and shoot cameras?
using point and shoots like the ricoh gr1s. only caps out at 3200 iso. some of his work seems to be higher iso with no data in the shadows at all. how does one acheive this look using point and shoot cameras?
Aha - understand - yes I thought about of course but I would find a basis on film and only the final step in darkroom!It's all in the darkroom / post processing.
He did a lot of darkroom work
Moriyama was known for abusing his negatives, while being a great printer. His greys and haloes suggest he heavily burnt in some areas, and the grain says he pushed the film. My guess is Tri-X to 1600 in a grainy acutance developer. Remember Moriyama embraced digital photography, although in my opinion lost something on the way.using point and shoots like the ricoh gr1s. only caps out at 3200 iso. some of his work seems to be higher iso with no data in the shadows at all. how does one acheive this look using point and shoot cameras?
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