John Phive
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but will have to wait 3 weeks or more to have the film/negatives sent back to me via the Lab.
Actually it isn't.I might point out that using a digital camera as a preview tool is, strictly speaking, off-topic for the analog-only section of Photrio (what used to be APUG -- Analog Photography Users' Group).
And yes, we need to get you developing your film.
I like the Holga view finder, it gives plenty of riggle room, even when shooting 4.5.
I may have prompted that deletion of the OP, though I see that I'd been corrected by Matt before @Brokenland deleted the content. In short, it was about using a digital camera as a visualizing aid before shooting with a Holga that has the viewfinder taped over.
Honestly, I'm not sure how that would help unless you have some kind of fixture to ensure the Holga and digital "viewfinder" are seeing the same view -- including some method of masking the digital frame to match the aspect ratio of the Holga (whether 6x6 or 6x4.5, neither will match the horizontal 4:3 or 3:2 or 16:9 of most digital cameras). I don't find the Holga viewfinder problematic, but then I started photography with waist level bright finders on Kodak Duaflex and Brownie Hawkeye Flash cameras, then moved "up" to a Starmite 127 unit with eye level finder for a while before getting my first adjustable camera, a Pony 135 Model C. I've worn glasses longer than I've used any sort of camera, and never found them to be a problem until I got my Super Ikonta B a few years ago.
Well, if simple is your primary goal, there are simpler cameras. Fixed focus lenses, not even two choices of exposure, no flash mount (or nothing that directly mounts a modern flash). Nearly all consumer "Christmas" cameras from the 1950s were in this class. Brownie Hawkeye Flash, Duaflex (each model had a simple version), and so forth (and other brands than Kodak, in 120, 620, and 127). Their spiritual successor is the 35 mm "not quite disposable" camera. Many of these can produce quite good images, and they're as simple to use as any 35 mm camera can get (load, aim, shoot, advance, repeat until film stops, rewind, unload).
They lack some of the appeals of the Holga, of course -- most of the unreliability in terms of light leaks, film scratches, etc., for instance, as well as the aberrations and vignetting that come from covering 6x6 with a lens that's closer to normal for a 4x4 negative. They're often cheaper, however...
Not my main goal of course ...it's the Holga look that I truly like. In the spirit of Holga though, who needs extraneous stuff (other than a tripod)? Point. Compose. Focus. Shoot.
its remembering to focus that is my weakness with the Holga.
However, I had a concern and contacted the Lab. My concern is that I fear I may not have held the shutter down long enough. Most (if not all of the shots) the shutter was held approx 20 secs. The lab informs me that they will perform a snip test where the lab will take a small sample of the film and determine if it needs to be pushed or pulled.
Actually, the Holga lens is a 60mm actual, which for a 6x6 frame is a rough equivalent to a 35-40mm lens on full frame. I don't know that what you're trying to do is entirely worthwhile, because the two cameras are so different as to be an apples-to-asteroids comparison. The one is a high precision, super-clinical, rectangular frame, the other a super-intuitive, incredibly imprecise camera with a square frame - so no matter your outcome, using the one will not predict the outcome of the other in a satisfying way.The whole point of starting this conversation was to show a before and after or a comparison shot between the Holga 120N and the Canon M6 (color converted to Black & White) but because I do not have any after shots from the Holga (yet) I've deleted the topic until I actually have some negatives to show for it, which I'll gathering up 4 rolls and sending to the lab this Fri. However, I had a concern and contacted the Lab. My concern is that I fear I may not have held the shutter down long enough. Most (if not all of the shots) the shutter was held approx 20 secs. The lab informs me that they will perform a snip test where the lab will take a small sample of the film and determine if it needs to be pushed or pulled.
Furthermore the image I originally posted was taken with a Canon M6 & 100mm USM lens. This would not have made a good reference image as I should have used the 50mm STM lens as the Holga used a 60mm equivalent.
Let me reiterate, Yes a 20 sec exposure can and does work as long as you've mounted a shutter release cable on the camera and mounted the camera to a tripod.
I think I've been doing very well with my Holga.
Speaking generally...This makes twice you've comments about my threads.. but I end up deleting them because they never end up going to the right direction.
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