copake_ham
Member
I finally had the opportunity over the recent holiday season to try out the Porta freebie film (some of it) that I received.
I received a mix of both 35 and 120 and both 160 and 400 and within that NC and VC. Quite a grab bag!
I chose to first shoot the 35mm, 160NC.
The below side-by-side shots were taken in Copake and then Tucson, portraits first, then landscapes. I have Nikon F5's at both locales. The lenses are higher-end Nikkor AF Zooms - a 35-70 in Tucson and a 24-80(?) in Copake. On each lens is a UV filter only (under my personal belief - "smash the filter, not the lens").
The "people" shots were taken indoors with Nikon auto flash units (SB-26 in Tucson, SB-800 in Copake).
The landscape shots were shot w/o flash, of course.
Both of the landscape shots were shot at sunset facing East with a bright sun over the shoulder. In the Tucson landscape shot (i.e. rightmost pic) the Sun was blocked over the shoulder by our house (hence a more panoramic composition). In the Copake landscape pic, the Sun was unblocked (I think I avoided my shadow) - although it was playing "peek-a-boo" with the clouds.
Sorry, I do not have the f-stop data.
From my pics I would certainly agree that the Porta is a fine portrait film. But as an outdoor film - it seems to over-emphasize the yellows - at least from this very small sample.
My conclusion is that this is probably a fine film for portraiture - but probably wouldn't be my first choice for exterior shooting.
I'd be curious what others find when they shoot this film - which, overall, I think is a nice tool to have in the "kit" for particular purposes.
I received a mix of both 35 and 120 and both 160 and 400 and within that NC and VC. Quite a grab bag!
I chose to first shoot the 35mm, 160NC.
The below side-by-side shots were taken in Copake and then Tucson, portraits first, then landscapes. I have Nikon F5's at both locales. The lenses are higher-end Nikkor AF Zooms - a 35-70 in Tucson and a 24-80(?) in Copake. On each lens is a UV filter only (under my personal belief - "smash the filter, not the lens").
The "people" shots were taken indoors with Nikon auto flash units (SB-26 in Tucson, SB-800 in Copake).
The landscape shots were shot w/o flash, of course.
Both of the landscape shots were shot at sunset facing East with a bright sun over the shoulder. In the Tucson landscape shot (i.e. rightmost pic) the Sun was blocked over the shoulder by our house (hence a more panoramic composition). In the Copake landscape pic, the Sun was unblocked (I think I avoided my shadow) - although it was playing "peek-a-boo" with the clouds.
Sorry, I do not have the f-stop data.
From my pics I would certainly agree that the Porta is a fine portrait film. But as an outdoor film - it seems to over-emphasize the yellows - at least from this very small sample.
My conclusion is that this is probably a fine film for portraiture - but probably wouldn't be my first choice for exterior shooting.
I'd be curious what others find when they shoot this film - which, overall, I think is a nice tool to have in the "kit" for particular purposes.