sodark1828
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Good work overall. You are doing well with what are really a quite basic cameras, but with excellent lenses.
Your Kota Tua shot could have been taken in 1900. Nice parchment effect. I am curious as to what that image looks like without the texture.
I recently visited the Tanjung Priok docks, the Old Port, and the area around the old Portuguese fort. Many changes in the three places. I hadn't been to the latter since the 1990s. Amazed, alarmed, even horrified at the changes. Rising ocean levels have done incredible damage. Many coastal villages in Java are suffering the same fate. Some have had to be abandoned due to flooding. The Al-Jazeera network did a detailed report on this recently. It's a very serious problem.
I was particularly dismayed with what I saw around the old Portuguese fort area. Eventually the entire area may have to be abandoned, businesses and homes relocated, inundated buildings demolished. Costs will be astronomical. Nothing appears to have been done so far. I hope that will change.
Some exceptionally good opportunities for documentary type images in those places. Much valuable photography to be done.
If I lived in Jakarta, I would be down there regularly, shooting before it all disappears.
Oops... I also meant to say, welcome to APUG, but I got so involved in your photos and what you had to say, I quite forgot. So here it is - welcome to APUG!
I am now out of Indonesia and in Malaysia (so hello from Ipoh, Perak), so I will get back to you with a response to your many interesting comments, in the near future.
Old(er) cameras tend to malfunction now and then. If the shutter goes wonky on you, as long as the sharpness is okay, you will be fine. Wildly over- or under-exposed negatives are a bummer to work with in the darkroom, but in that processing 'medium' we aren't supposed to talk about in this forum, lest the fanatically analog Nazis turn their Rottweilers loose on us, many small miracles are possible, so you will be fine.
Think of all the wonderful things in Jakarta you can photograph with so little effort! An amazing place. Surabaya where I hang out, is a parish by comparison.
Anyway, later, shortly. Meantimes, keep on shooting!
good work... try to go to Sunda Kelapa Harbor, you'll find interesting traditional harbor activityBeen a while haven post in APUG. I was too busy at my work. This is some of the result from my second roll film using KODAK Color Plus 200.
Bank Indonesia Museum
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Fatahillah Square
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Tebet Train Station
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Some random streetshoot near Fatahillah Square
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Jakarta Kota Train Station, one of the oldest train station in Jakarta
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I'm currently looking for developer tank and liquid (also a scanner) to develop the film myself. Since only 3 workshop in Jakarta who can do film and it takes them 5 days to develop and scan it.
I'm also has my eyes to new analog camera such as M6 or budget friendly like Canonet/Ricoh. Hopefully I can get them soon
Hi Ozmoose! just find a spare time to get into the forum now.. So you're from ipoh. I vist KL pretty frequently, most of my families stays there now.
Hello there,
I really like your 3 shots you posted! I also love Jakarta and have been there twice for business, shooting a couple of rolls both times.
If you don't mind, I'd post a few once I had time to print them.
Keep up the good work and enjoy that wonderful city!
Ben
good work... try to go to Sunda Kelapa Harbor, you'll find interesting traditional harbor activity
never been there... i still busy with my ECN-2 local labHi Bence. Sure!! you can share you post in here. The spirit of Shoot Jakarta Project is actually to show what kind of city Jakarta is, and how people live in Jakarta.
Hi Ian! yes Sunda Kelapa will be indeed! was there around 2010 during my digital age. LOL!!!! How is the harbor now? When I went there, it was so dirty.
Hi Bence. Sure!! you can share you post in here. The spirit of Shoot Jakarta Project is actually to show what kind of city Jakarta is, and how people live in Jakarta.
Yes, hit those streets, shoot away, and keep on shooting. Your image will be very valuable socio-historical records, in the not-too-distant future, when it all changes and what you have recorded on film or pixels becomes past.
Another important aspect of recording and showing your images from the streets, is the photos can be a useful tool to promote social changes and improvements in conditions and facilities. As we know, there is more than enough money in Indonesia to do many more things than are now being done. Sadly, the money is being mismanaged, and there doesn't seem to be the will, either politically or publicly, to change things.
Sodark1828 (#3), what you say about Ahok is so spot-on,I agree with everything you wrote. Sad that he is now in prison, such a great talent and poltiical force languishing behind bars and wasted. Even sadder that Jokowi did so little if anything to try to diffuse the situation, obviously from his usual fear of offending anyone. Leadership was sadly lacking in this situation. Let us hope and pray that Ahok will be released soon. Indonesia needs people like him to move it forward.
I went to Palmera many years ago and also shot many memorable images there, on slide film. Used a Leica M2 and sneaked around taking grab shots of people living their everyday lives. I see the same scenes even now, in Surabaya, along the rail lines between Gubeng station and Kota in the city center or to Sidotopo where the old (Dutch colonial era) locomotive works are still in use. In some places along the tracks, when the trains come along (fortunately they don't travel at fast speeds), there is less than one meter of free space between train and houses.
All this will disappear eventually. Most Surabayans won't miss it, if indeed they even know it exists.
I'm now in Sarawak, shooting with my Nikon D700 kit and a 1966 Rolleicord Vb I bought recently, with B&W film and a 16 exposure kit. Ten, twenty, thirty years ago it would have been a Nikkormat 35mm kit and a Rolleiflex. Times pass, things (and photo gear) change. The 'cord kit is getting heavier to carry around. I had six rolls of film processed in a small Chinese studio here last week, and was amazed at the beautiful negatives I got back, even if the studio owner did them in print developer. The negs look good. I hope they print or scan as nicely.
Everyone uses phones now as cameras. Mirrorless compacts also. Not many DSLRs. I almost never see anyone with a film camera out of Singapore or KL, maybe as film is impossible to get locally and it costs too much per image to be economically viable. People tend to stare at me when I use the Rolleicord, but as I use the waist level finder and I don't lift the camera to my eyes to shoot with as I do the Nikon, they quickly lose interest and go about their business. I get better shots then.
I may return to Surabaya in November or December. There are many nice places in East Java I want to revisit, not having seen them since the 1980s. Malang was then a quite compact, quiet, cool and relaxing place. Now it's fast becoming another Indonesian city, tho' by no means as crowded, congested and polluted as is my usual hangout, Surabaya. Life in Malang doesn't take place so much in shopping malls as it does in 'boyo, but then it's cooler in Malang, and locals can hang out in the great outdoors without being cooked by the sun and the heat. Good photo ops abound in either city. Oddly, in Surabaya, I rarely see anyone shooting scenes they can't do without getting out of their massive air-conditioned SUVs. There are more photographers out and about in Malang, but again they don't seem keen to go beyond the pretty-postcard-picture places. The best shots in either city take a bit of walking to find and get to.
The Shoot Jakarta Project is interesting. I for one will look forward to seeing some images posted. Will you be doing a web site for it in the near future? It's the sort of photography more shooters should be out doing, before the city changes and many of the areas in the city center disappear forever.
I'll most definitely be watching this thread, and looking for more images. Keep up the shooting.
LOL! same here! hahahaha. A lot people in here use DSLR or just their phone in thaking pictures. Thats makes my Ricoh GR and Yashica looks a little bit "historic". Although the film community has raise once again for the past one year. But its still hard to find a film processing workshop in here.Everyone uses phones now as cameras. Mirrorless compacts also. Not many DSLRs. I almost never see anyone with a film camera out of Singapore or KL, maybe as film is impossible to get locally and it costs too much per image to be economically viable. People tend to stare at me when I use the Rolleicord, but as I use the waist level finder and I don't lift the camera to my eyes to shoot with as I do the Nikon, they quickly lose interest and go about their business. I get better shots then.
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