abruzzi
Member
I've deceided to try out 8x10 to see if I can get on with the increased sizes of everything, but at the moment, the only 8x10 lenses I find with shutters are a bit on the pricy side for a test, so I was looking at the various 360mm-450mm process lenses that can frequently be had for under $200.
But since they generally don't have shutters (or if they do, their price is much higher) I would need to do the lens cap thing. Which brings me to the question, for people who do this, how you get the shutter speed down to something you can manually time? Are you using super slow film? (the slowest actual film, not counting litho film, that Freestyle sells in 8x10 is Catlabs 80) Are you using glass plates, litho or xray film? Are you using ƒ128? Are you using an ND filter? Or are you just photographing in dark places?
I say this because I live in a place that is sunny-16 300+ days a year. An outdoor photo (and I shoot almost exclusively outdoors) on ISO 100 film would require ƒ128 for a 1 second exposure (assuming no reciprocity issues at 1sec).
(I'm actually very happy shooting 4x5 and wouldn't be considering 8x10 except that for most things, 4x5 is just a touch too small for nice looking contact prints, and I'm curious to try some of the alt processes that can only be done through contact prints.)
But since they generally don't have shutters (or if they do, their price is much higher) I would need to do the lens cap thing. Which brings me to the question, for people who do this, how you get the shutter speed down to something you can manually time? Are you using super slow film? (the slowest actual film, not counting litho film, that Freestyle sells in 8x10 is Catlabs 80) Are you using glass plates, litho or xray film? Are you using ƒ128? Are you using an ND filter? Or are you just photographing in dark places?
I say this because I live in a place that is sunny-16 300+ days a year. An outdoor photo (and I shoot almost exclusively outdoors) on ISO 100 film would require ƒ128 for a 1 second exposure (assuming no reciprocity issues at 1sec).
(I'm actually very happy shooting 4x5 and wouldn't be considering 8x10 except that for most things, 4x5 is just a touch too small for nice looking contact prints, and I'm curious to try some of the alt processes that can only be done through contact prints.)