Thank you! I can't wait to do some shooting with it. I hear that the light meter can be a bit unreliable with newer batteries, though, so I might have to invest in a light meter.average one 120 roll every 2-3 weeks...
of course if i had the olympus pen i'd be shooting a lot more - great trade! never should have sold the olympus pen! enjoy.
Well now, note that I said "cheap to get into." I've got three cameras and one with an extra telephoto lens that I got for a pretty nice deal. I might sell the Pantax because I can get a couple hundred for that, it seems and my entry cost will be even lower. Of course, I think I need to invest in a manual light meter, so maybe not. I'm thinking about limiting myself to a roll a month for now. The everyday snapshots I can leave up to my point and shoot, but when I see something I want to remember, I'm pulling out the film camera. The truth is, I might even shoot less than a roll a month.OP: I don't think you're likely to save any money shooting film, but you just might find that you enjoy the process and, if you do, that it's enough of a reason to do it.
I like your method. Gives you a chance to really decide what you like and what you don't.Every year I put every print I make on my bulletin board and live with it for awhile. The ones that fall out of favor get pulled down in a few days, but I leave the ones I do like in place throughout the year. So far this year I have 14 prints still hanging on my Wall of Fame but I suspect at least two of those will come back down before too much more time passes.
Photography can be done indoors as well. The camera doesn't require fresh outdoor air to function.Very rarely shooting during 2018, all it's been is during trips (spain, hungary and romania this year). I find it hard to give my self a reason to go out when at home nowdays. My last thoughts have been regarding building myself a very small but usable darkroom at home and making some nice prints instead.
Photography can be done indoors as well. The camera doesn't require fresh outdoor air to function.
I rarely shoot unless I'm working on a self-assigned project or to answer a technical question. When I was professional most of my shots were either money or demo/portfolio. Now I shoot intending to make fine printsl I'm not into accumulating snapshots. "Enlightenment favors the prepared mind."
... only a handful of my photographs that I think are really good. There are lots that I like, but that's different. Really good? Not so many. ...
i am often amazaed at a print i made that i think is "one i like" vs. really good... someone sees a print i think is in the 1st category, admires it, and explains what is of interest and important. i see it from their eyes in a new way. it doesn't necessarily make it really good, but something that i didn't consciously see that occurs to another.
Yes, optical printing (sometimes referred to as "wet" printing) uses an enlarger to expose photographic printing paper by projecting light through the negative onto the paper. The paper is sensitive to light in the same way film is so the result is a positive image. The paper is developed in a similar fashion to film. That's a super-simplified description, but you get the idea, I'm sure. No scanning takes place - it's a process that precedes computers by about a century.So being a total newbie with film, does developing prints via a darkroom skip the digital scanning process for a pure analogue experience?
Yes, optical printing (sometimes referred to as "wet" printing) uses an enlarger to expose photographic printing paper by projecting light through the negative onto the paper. The paper is sensitive to light in the same way film is so the result is a positive image. The paper is developed in a similar fashion to film. That's a super-simplified description, but you get the idea, I'm sure. No scanning takes place - it's a process that precedes computers by about a century.
Here is an Ilford website link oriented towards beginners who want to learn how to print in a darkroom.That's pretty cool. I might have to try that out some day.
Personally I really don't care if my picture is "really good" - if I like it myself and can enjoy seeing it on my wall then that's what does it for me.
Thinking about driving to PA from NM and back to add adventure to my sweetheart's mandatory funeral attendance (think Kaddish).
Schedule is awkward because the guest of honor has not quite done the deed.
The RT travel and a few days wandering fly-over country would define some kind of 9 day personal photo assignment.
I'd photograph the mourners ifn' ...
Terrible weather would be stimulating.
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