keenmaster486
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If you just start to shoot slide film, you should keep the number of variables at the absolute minimum, and shooting expired film is not helpful in this regard. Keep the expired film, adding another year to 15 year old film is not going to hurt it much more, but start with moderately new stock until you have a firm grasp of the process, proper exposure and a good handle on slide film's contrast.-For the expired film. None of it is more than ~15 years expired, most of it less. I don't know whether the expired Fujichrome was refrigerated. Some of the Kodachrome was refrigerated. So I'm hesitant to use the standard "1 stop per decade" rule because I don't know how the film was stored! What would be the consequences of, for instance, shooting a roll of the Provia expired 2007 at nominal ISO, supposing it wasn't refrigerated and needs a half or a full stop of overexposure?
Fuji has three different emulsions under the Velvia name: Velvia 50, Velvia 100 and Velvia 100F. They are all contrasty and highly saturated, but there are subtle differences between them. Look for sample pics to learn which one is optimal for your subject matter.-You'll notice none of the Fujichrome I got was 50 ISO. This was purely a cost-cutting move on my part; the 100 ISO stuff is generally cheaper in my experience. Some of it was the "100F" variant - what does the "F" mean and should I treat it any differently from the straight "100" type?
Right now, there is no processing offered for Kodachrome media, and cross processing it in C-41 or E6 will give you blank slides with no subject matter. There are people who process it as B&W slides, but that's not the point of using it IMHO.-I've never shot any Kodachrome before. Are there any tips you can give me on how to shoot this stuff? (supposing there's no effective difference between shooting expired Kodachrome on the Pirate-K14 process and the real deal ten years ago) Also, should I treat the 25 ISO stuff differently than the 64 ISO? For instance, certain subjects that look better with 25 than 64?
Again, look for sample pics and match these with what you want to create. Artistic expression doesn't follow rule books.-Velvia vs. Provia. I know enough to tell the difference between these two at a glance - but is there a usage or subject matter where either of these films really shines?
See my above comment. With no processing offered for this film there won't be color shifts, because there will be no colors-Some of my Kodachrome stock is from the late 70's - early 80's and was probably not refrigerated. Does anyone think I can expect color shifts, or should I only worry about exposure given that the dyes are added during processing?
Since you appear to just start with E6, I'd recommend you shoot a few rolls and have them developed by a commercial lab, until you got exposure and subject matter pinned down. Once you know you can create properly exposed slide film which meets your expectations in terms of subject matter rendering, then the time has come for home processing. Go one step at a time, and possible problems popping up on the way can be fixed quickly and efficiently. There is really no point in creating another "I just started, got some E6 rolls of unknown pedigree and a dev kit, and my slides look odd" thread series.-I'm looking at the Arista Rapid E-6 developing kit at Freestyle. I've been dabbling in developing B&W film by hand (I have a Super System 4), but of course E-6 is an entirely different animal and requires temperature control, etc... What is everyone's opinion on the quality of this particular kit and whether it's worth it or not?
Fascinating - I've heard the exact opposite!Of the colour slide films I think Kodachrome aged the worst before processing.
Forget about the Kodachrome. Even when the proper K14 process was available expired film had magenta casts and lost a lot of Dmax, so blacks came out as muddy greys and it went quite grainy. Of the colour slide films I think Kodachrome aged the worst before processing.
That sounds symptomatic of exposure to heat.
Well, this is the last thing I want to do.Some people shoot expired slide film in a Holga or Diana and cross process it hoping for wacky, soft, technically "wrong" results.
And with that huge laundry list of film and cameras you will never gain any expertise.Sorry for all the annoying questions; I just have no experience with this.
And with that huge laundry list of film and cameras you will never gain any expertise.
The operative word is ONE.
Choose ONE camera and ONE in-date film, and use ONLY that combination until you're so familiar with it that you can shoot in your sleep. ALWAYS shoot at box speed during this first phase. Once you have mastered the process to the point where you can get consistent uniform exposures ALL the time, you can expand your study.
That usually starts by varying the film speed to see what happens. Increase or decrease the shutter speed in half-stop steps. Always shoot both under- and over-exposed tests on a single roll. That gives overall average exposure which assures consistent development.
You can change cameras if you want.
ALL that does is muck up your exposures due to inconsistent shutter speeds.
- Leigh
True. Forgive me for trying to be rational.like your suggestion will be a learning experience so will this.
certainly your suggestion of one camera one film &c is sensible but there more to life than being sensible.
I| would point out John that the OP did say he wanted to avoid going into using slide film "blind" - as fun as that might be.
And with that huge laundry list of film and cameras you will never gain any expertise.
The operative word is ONE.
Choose ONE camera and ONE in-date film, and use ONLY that combination until you're so familiar with it that you can shoot in your sleep. ALWAYS shoot at box speed during this first phase. Once you have mastered the process to the point where you can get consistent uniform exposures ALL the time, you can expand your study.
That usually starts by varying the film speed to see what happens. Increase or decrease the shutter speed in half-stop steps. Always shoot both under- and over-exposed tests on a single roll. That gives overall average exposure which assures consistent development.
You can change cameras if you want.
ALL that does is muck up your exposures due to inconsistent shutter speeds.
- Leigh
Pick a camera, load a film...
Cameras I have available right now:
35mm - my trusty Kodak Retina IIa rangefinder. I use this camera for almost all my 35mm stuff.
120 - Voigtlander Bessa I; I've used this only for B&W so far and I've been highly impressed. For me it strikes a perfect balance between features and ease of use, except that it doesn't have a rangefinder...
120 (well, 620, but I can respool) - Kodak Duaflex II (I like this little camera, it's quite simple and the resultant photos are surprisingly good... granted, I've only used it with B&W though. I like the idea of the square images.)
(...)
35mm - Regula Cita, German-made rangefinder
35mm - Pentax P30T SLR, with standard and telephoto lenses
120 - Kodak Brownie 2 (maybe it would be fun to run some Provia through this? I shot a roll of long-expired Ektachrome with this once and the results were surprisingly good, even with the magenta shift)
120 (actually 620) - Kodak Tourist II
120 - Pocket Kodak No. 1 (this one has a light leak somewhere. It's not horrible but it's there. It actually lent some character to the images when I ran a roll of B&W through it)
It appears that Rudeofus hasn't been following the thread where piratelogy shows the colour transparency results he has been getting with experiments in processing Kodachrome.
Funny thing, since that post I've picked up two more cameras:From the cameras above i'd only pick the Pentax P30T.
Funny thing, since that post I've picked up two more cameras:
Zeiss Ikon Contaflex Beta
Kodak Retina Reflex III
Both of these have shutters pinpoint-accurate on the slower speeds as far as I can tell (for instance, the 1 second speed is precisely in line with my watch on both, something I've not seen yet in an old camera). The meters are also spot on, agreeing with each other and with my handheld meter.
It's just because people are negative, you have to do some reversal to be Positive. Perhaps pouring a bit of blix on the thread would do.Damn there's a lot of negativity on this thread. It's only slide film for goodness sake!
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