Nachdem ich letzten Donnerstag den 35-mm-Film im Konglomerat entwickeln konnte, habe ich heute die Negativ-Streifen abgeholt und im Scanner über das Notebook invertiert.

Leider ist kein einziges brauchbares Foto entstanden!

Bei den Video-Rezensionen hieß es zwar, man müsse den Schlitz der Filmklappe hinten mit lichtdichtem Klebeband überkleben, weil der nicht dicht sei und daher die Fotos beeinträchtigt werden könnten, aber auf meinen Aufnahmen ist einfach *gar nix* zu sehen!
Bei fast allen ist einfach das komplette Bild weiß überbelichtet.

Ob es nun daran lag, kann ich nicht sagen.
Ob ich der "Diana" noch eine Chance geben werde?
Eher nicht, dafür sind die Filme einfach zu teuer.

Schade, dass ich mir nicht notiert hatte, welche Motive ich damit aufgenommen hatte (oder wollte).

Schon bissl enttäuschend (nachdem auf youtube durchaus gute Fotos damit zu sehen waren)!

Next: Die 110er Pocketfilme der Rollei und Pentax zur Entwicklung bringen, sobald ich das Budget dafür habe.

#Lomography #DianaMini #AnalogFotografie
This is from a trip to Georgia i had in 2012. I was walking around with an acquaintance I made there, and he took me to a local cafeteria, were a couple of women chefs were working and cooking. We were on the way to try to find some food for his dog that was terminally ill, didnt stay to eat, but I remember the place as very authentic. I will return to photos from this trip later.
This was also a period i was very into low fi black and white film and soviet camers. I believe this was some cheap film i bought in Tblisi, perhaps Svema or somthing similar.

#tblisi #georgia #postsoviet #2012
#badfilm #expiredfilm #nikonfm2 #rodinal #svema #lomography #analogphotography #analog #35mm #blackandwhitephotography

A Day Out With The Sprocket Rocket And Expired Lomography Colour Film

I have a bit of a love/hate relationship with the Sprocket Rocket. Whenever I can’t find anything to watch on YouTube, I always seem to gravitate to watching videos about peoples’ experiences with this panoramic toy camera from Lomography. Yet whenever I try to use mine, I’m filled with dread that I’ll break the film, like I did the first time. So it sits in its box, along with an Agfa Clack and a Reader’s Digest camera that I’ve always been promising myself that one day I’ll flip its lens. But whenever I’m going out, that ridiculous looking blue beastie always screams out to me, ‘take me! Take me!’ Normally I just ignore it, but last week I felt sorry for the Rocket, and out of its box it came.

The plan was actually to test a new (to me) camera, the Proud Chrome Six III, a heavily beat up medium format folding camera, and to try out an Industar 69M 28mm pancake lens that had fortuitously been recalibrated for micro four-thirds. Since the Sprocket Rocket was a bit of an afterthought, I didn’t want to use a ‘good’ film in it, so I rummaged around for something to use.

I have a small ‘collection’ of films that I keep in a box, just to see how they behave under ‘ambient’ conditions. They don’t go in the refrigerator, just sit on the side. Some of these are slightly expired now, including a few rolls of Lomography ISO 100 colour film (best before c.2023, I reckon). I had one of these rolls in the Zenit 11 for the Shitty Camera Challenge’s #CrappyCommieCameraParty, and it never got finished. So I rewound the film into it’s cassette in the Zenit and then reloaded it into the Rocket. I made a ‘best guess’ as to the number of exposures, then added the Rocket to my camera bag along with the Proud Chrome Six and an Olympus Pen E-PL3 and the Industar-69. 

https://flic.kr/p/2sdtGNb

It was a bright but overcast day, and we headed off to Barra and Costa Nova for lunch at the Marisqueira, the most wonderful fish restaurant. I also had a chance for a post-lunch walk around Costa Nova  — a ‘digestivo’, if you will — and at a derelict structure just outside of town. One of my favourite spots, but one that’s not too easy to photograph when the sun is in the wrong place, since the wall of the building can cast some strong shadows. The hazy day provided bright enough conditions for the Rocket without the inconvenience of harsh shadows. Not my favourite situation, but hey.

https://flic.kr/p/2sdp1ri

The Sprocket Rocket is a simple camera with just one shutter speed of about 1/100s (and ‘bulb’) and two apertures, one for sunny and one for cloudy weather (about f16 and f11, respectively). Normally, Lomography recommend using ISO 400 film with this camera, but I reckoned that all being well, if I left the camera on the ‘cloudy’ setting, it might work with the ISO 100 film, and fortunately it did. After completing the film, I had to wait a couple of weeks as the stormy weather started again. But a couple of days ago the weather cleared and I popped the film into Forever Blue in Aveiro.

https://flic.kr/p/2sduTUL

After development, I scanned the film at home with an Epson Perfection v750 Pro flat bed scanner and Epson Scan software. I tried to use the Lomography 35mm scanning frame, so that I could include the sprockets in the final image, but for some reason it didn’t work. I need to look into the scanning process for this. If you’re interested, I’ve posted the whole series in an album on my Flickr if you want to see the rest of the images.

https://flic.kr/p/2sdunMW

I was quite surprised that I got anything from this film, but in the end it worked quite nicely. As a panoramic camera, it doesn’t hold a candle to the Horizon (or the Widelux[x], or the X-pan), but it’s fun to use and I can always see the appeal. I’m also a bit agnostic over Lomography films. I absolutely adore Lomochrome Turquoise and the Red (though I’m leaning a bit more in favour of Harman Red), but this ISO 100 film actually produced some nice results.

https://flic.kr/p/2sdp1q1

The first image, of the driftwood on the beach at Barra, has two large white splotches that I thought was dust on the glass, but a closer look revealed that they were in fact images from the Zenit. Looks like I didn’t wind the reloaded film far enough after all. There’s still a couple of rolls sitting around, and now I’m wondering what camera I can put them in.

https://flic.kr/p/2sdunLt

If you are on Mastodon, you can now follow this blog directly. Just go to Mastodon and follow the ‘Snapshot’ WordPress account at @keithdevereux.wordpress.com. All new posts will be automatically updated to your timeline.

#Architecture #Barra #Building #CostaNova #Lomography #Panorama #Portugal #SprocketRocket #Street #Townscape #Vagueira

Trying to decide which film camera to carry around with me and seems like lomography.com/cameras is proving to be a slightly better resource than flickr.com right now for searching 'by film camera'.

🤔

#35mm #istillshootfilm #filmphotography #photography #flickr #lomography

#instaxclub #instax #lomography #lomowall A lomowall created with black-and-white Instant Square photos, shot with the #Diana Instant Square. - 📸 Diana Instant Square 🔍 20mm Fisheye Lens 🎞️ Instax Square Monochrome
Edgar Almeida (@[email protected])

#lomography #instax square #doubleexposure

Pixelfed