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My first shots with a Graflex Crown.

Two Rocks

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Two Rocks

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Candlejack

Member
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Sep 2, 2021
Messages
228
Location
Louisiana
Format
Med. Format Pan
I am beyond happy and excited. The camera arrived around 5pm, and I had a few minutes to familiarize myself with how to operate it, after reading through an old manual. I then was able to take a few shots on Arista Ortho Lith film. (Film photo below over darkslide to get the positive negative look)

All I can say is wow. This is so much different then a manual 35mm camera, a holga, box camera, pinhole etc. Yall probably already know this, but wow.

Setting it up, focusing the shot, making sure the correct order of operation is taking place, its both relaxing and rewarding.

After taking the shots, I stood there and enjoyed the sunset. I finally felt "In the moment" for the first time in a long time.

Thank yall for all your help and advice
 

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Wait until you shoot a conventional negative film and get a full-range image you can scan or print. :smile:

But yes, you've found our secret -- the reason large format still exists. It's a whole different art form from 35mm or even (mostly) medium format, never mind digital.
 
Wait until you shoot a conventional negative film and get a full-range image you can scan or print. :smile:

But yes, you've found our secret -- the reason large format still exists. It's a whole different art form from 35mm or even (mostly) medium format, never mind digital.

I cant wait to do conventional film in it. Im currently doing the alt processes.. but im thinking atleast contact printing to rc paper and developing that will have to eventually take place :smile:!
 
So how's the search for a second job (to pay for equipment and film) going? :wink:
 
I was up at the crack of dawn yesterday shooting magic hour footage of a local farm with my 4x5 Gundlach Korona. Right behind me was a road packed with traffic (there are several schools out there)--horns honking and engine noise and all that, but once I began framing up and pulling focus I completely forgot it was there. The sheer awsomeness of what you see in your ground glass wipes away all the noise and stress....
 
The sheer awsomeness of what you see in your ground glass wipes away all the noise and stress....

And that goes double the first time you enlarge from a large format negative, and find you can read license plates on cars parked more than a block away, or identify faces on an overlook at a quarter mile -- without special film and developers.
 
Good for you; that worked out. But as Dan and other suggested… you need a new camera already. How are you going to do this, use old lenses in barrel? LOL

29F86BE4-D345-4718-9FCA-465F08BEADAB.jpeg
 
I was up at the crack of dawn yesterday shooting magic hour footage of a local farm with my 4x5 Gundlach Korona. Right behind me was a road packed with traffic (there are several schools out there)--horns honking and engine noise and all that, but once I began framing up and pulling focus I completely forgot it was there. The sheer awsomeness of what you see in your ground glass wipes away all the noise and stress....

Thats so awesome! We have tons of farms around here. I need to do some morning photod :smile:!
 
How are you going to do this, use old lenses in barrel?

Slow, slow film and a lens cap. Paper negatives at EI 3 to 6, stop down to f/32 or smaller, and you're exposing longer than a second already. Obviously you won't be hand holding with that kit, but you'd have the same issue with a view or field camera.

Or make up a guillotine shutter, or front mount a Packard.
 
Slow, slow film and a lens cap. Paper negatives at EI 3 to 6, stop down to f/32 or smaller, and you're exposing longer than a second already. Obviously you won't be hand holding with that kit, but you'd have the same issue with a view or field camera.

Or make up a guillotine shutter, or front mount a Packard.

Yup. This film is 6 iso :smile:
 
All of that is correct but you could do that with your box camera. Get some real film ASAP and you'll have a much better experience. Is the rangefinder working and accurate? If so, then you'll have an even greater experience.
 
All of that is correct but you could do that with your box camera. Get some real film ASAP and you'll have a much better experience. Is the rangefinder working and accurate? If so, then you'll have an even greater experience.

Oh I have regular film, Im just having fun making mistakes with this film first before I expend more expensive film. Not sure if the range finder is working.. Do they still make batteries that size? (I havent looked into it yet)
 
The battery is not necessary for using the rangefinder. It is completely optical, You should by looking through and aligning the overlapping image. The battery was for a feature (forgot it's name) that projected light as a focus aid. IDK what battery it uses because none of my Graphics have that feature.
 
Cool beans. Ill fiddle around with it and read into it more. I guess ill see how it corresponds to the ground glass to see if its accurate?
 
Cool beans. Ill fiddle around with it and read into it more. I guess ill see how it corresponds to the ground glass to see if its accurate?
Yes, Focus as measured distances (and "infinity") and compare to GG. Also check the distance scales on the bed, if yo have them, to check that they are correct for the lens.
 
Use the rangefinder and go full Weegee.

I've been doing that with my Crown. It was amazing how little film I shoot though. Going out and shooting two sheets is par for the course.
 
Use the rangefinder and go full Weegee.

I've been doing that with my Crown. It was amazing how little film I shoot though. Going out and shooting two sheets is par for the course.
Yes!!! For me it's 4 sheets. :smile:
 
Heh. I've got three Grafmatics now, that's 50% more film than will fit in my Agitank, and if I'm going full Weegee, I could shoot all of that in about two minutes (fifteen seconds or so to go through on Grafmatic's six frames -- but it takes thirty seconds or so to dismount one and mount the next).

Fortunately for my budget, I have no reason to want to shoot through three Grafmatics in next to no time -- but I can easily see getting through all of them in a day of street shooting.
 
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