Emil
Member
Hi.
I just wanted to share a little newfound knowledge here. I recently bought an Olympus XA, a wonderful camera and a tribute to the genius of the designer Yoshihisa Maitani. But unfortunately there are limits to genius. The camera has no way of attaching filters, which of course is crucial to b/w photography.
So when I was ready to go out to the beach today, to take some pictures of seagulls and crows in the snow, armed with the XA, I suddenly remembered that the film I was using, Agfa APX100 is very blue-sensitive, therefore needing a filter.
So what do you do? I found a .40Y Cibachrome filter in a drawer, and cut it to a small rectangle, and installed in the back of the camera between the film and the lens! This works very well, and there are even some small tabs, that the filter can squeeze in between, and hold itself without glue or tape. The only real tricky bit was to cut a little piece of one corner of the filter, to not interfere with the film advance gear.
So to sum it up: It's easy to use filters with an XA if you don't mind cutting up a gel filter.
Cheers,
Emil
I just wanted to share a little newfound knowledge here. I recently bought an Olympus XA, a wonderful camera and a tribute to the genius of the designer Yoshihisa Maitani. But unfortunately there are limits to genius. The camera has no way of attaching filters, which of course is crucial to b/w photography.
So when I was ready to go out to the beach today, to take some pictures of seagulls and crows in the snow, armed with the XA, I suddenly remembered that the film I was using, Agfa APX100 is very blue-sensitive, therefore needing a filter.
So what do you do? I found a .40Y Cibachrome filter in a drawer, and cut it to a small rectangle, and installed in the back of the camera between the film and the lens! This works very well, and there are even some small tabs, that the filter can squeeze in between, and hold itself without glue or tape. The only real tricky bit was to cut a little piece of one corner of the filter, to not interfere with the film advance gear.
So to sum it up: It's easy to use filters with an XA if you don't mind cutting up a gel filter.
Cheers,
Emil