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this was taken with the Rolleiflex f2.8 D with Xenotar lens - Henry, the movie in the poster to the right of the chap in the photo is one of our favourites - "Les Femmes du 6ème étage"

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this, of course, was taken in Paris - with the Zeiss Ikonta

Edited by Dan Ryan
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Welcome, dear visitor! As registered member you'd see an image here…

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IID, 50mm 2.5 Hektor, Svema 400

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this was taken with the Rolleiflex f2.8 D with Xenotar lens - Henry, the movie in the poster to the right of the chap in the photo is one of our favourites - "Les Femmes du 6ème étage"

attachicon.gifNoel800-1.jpg

 

this, of course, was taken in Paris - with the Zeiss Ikonta

attachicon.gifsquareCar.jpg

 

Yes Dan a comedy a funny one

I like the smile of the guy

Vintage color in the second picture in Paris

Thank you

Henry

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Second roll thro' the R5, this time Neopan 400.  These first two were on the High St with the 60mm Macro Elmarit-R.

 

1) In a charity shop window.

 

36238945942_cccf002fd6_b.jpg

 

2) In need of a trim.

 

36406927315_1cbdec0a9c_b.jpg

 

Keith I like the look in picture 2 ... you are seen :) seems you are not appreciated , funny look

Great b&w tone in picture 1. I see it's Fuji

Thank you

Henry

Edited by Doc Henry
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Love those retro colours!  BTW, what do Canadians tire of?   ;)

 

After 27 years in the UK, and 32 years in Canada, I have to say that the only spelling difference that has stuck has been 'tire' vs. 'tyre'. My colours are not colors, and at night I don't say 'goodnite' and even if I go to Timmies I want a doughnut rather than a donut. But 'tire' just seems right in a way that 'tyre' does not. But perhaps you pneu that....

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And by coincidence, I have been playing with Neopan 400 today, since it is my grainiest 400ASA film. I wanted to see if the motorised Rondinax would make Rodinal developed films even grainier, hence using a film I regard as dreadfully grainy. It was dark, and rained heavily this morning (welcome after two months with no rain, probably thanks to Trump in some way or another) so I wandered around the house using f1.4 and 1/8 second. This is cropped to about 40% of the area of the whole negative:

 

35572558504_3f49f1c899_c.jpg

Roots by chrism229, on Flickr (OM-2n, Zuiko 50mm/f1.4, Neopan 400, Rodinal 1+50, X1 scan.)

 

Conclusion: grain, yes, but no worse than usual. It appears that continuous agitation in the motorised Rondinax is giving results so close to the usual intermittent agitation that I can't tell the difference. And that means I can go ahead and use it pretty much all the time, although I'll have to build another base for the Rondinax 60 so I can develop 120 film the same way.

 

Chris

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When I first posted shots from the R5 / 60mm Macro Elmarit combo someone (Chris, Gary?) asked if I had tried the macro function.  I do not have the macro add-ons, just the naked lens but even so it has a quite a close-focus capability.  Neither of these two photos are at the closest setting but nevertheless the results of 'getting in close' are pleasing (both hand-held).  Neopan 400.

 

36406927835_904c6339de_b.jpg

 

36238945442_b5a16988dd_b.jpg

 

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Hi Philip - So sorry for the delay.  Been busy doing nothing here in Israel :)   I guess I have ben a bit presumptuous regarding people's assumed knowledge of the zone system.  No really point in talking about it if you haven't used it (which you obviously don't need to as you are doing quite alright with your workflow).  However, fwiw, the book "The Negative" by Ansel Adams is a really quick read and an amazing bottoms up tutorial on it.  

Adam, I'm afraid I don't know much about the zone system so it is difficult for me to comment. For instance, I don't know which zone is considered as the baseline for the speed (wikipedia suggests it's zone 1) but in any event since you use an external meter and a complex system it is difficult to say exactly whether and how much you're over- resp. under-exposing. I guess if you metered in-camera at the same time at box speed you would have a reference point. For the heck of it you could set the meter one or two stops over some time and see what happens. 

 

I've shot metered film cameras since the 1980s and have only very rarely had troubles, though when they occur it is usually because I haven't paid attention to the scen.

 

Dumb meters, by which I mean those which do not make any adjustments themselves to exposure based on the values encountered in the metering area, require the photographer to pay attention to what is in the frame, such as excessively bright or dark areas which may "fool" the meter. These are the most common meters and are found in the film Leica Ms and also in my Hasselblad.

 

More intelligent meters, such as the meters in Canon's EOS cameras and Nikon's colour matrix system, are supposedly able to make "intelligent" adjustments to exposure based on the light (and, as I understand it, in the case of Nikons matrix system also based on the colours in the metering area). I only have experience (but a lot of experience) with the EOS system and I can say that it is quite impressive, but naturally not infallible.

 

Regardless of whichever meter the camera has the photographer needs to be prepared to adjust the readings based on experience. Or just be prepared to accept whatever comes out of the camera and deal with it in post. That certainly works very well in most cases for colour negative film in light of its amazing latitude. And I find it works well enough for my photography, given how forgiving most films are and my own scanning and post-processing skills.

 

br
Philip

 

 

 

 

 

Hi Paul - I am SO impressed by your photographs.  Both technically and more importantly how you have managed to get intimate with you subjects.  You really have something special here.  I especially love this one of the girls studying/praying.  It is really world class.  Keep up the fantastic photography!  (Btw, as I am typing I can here fireworks in the background.  Here in Jerusalem, it is a common sound in the evenings as it means there is wedding underway in a nearby Arab neighborhood :) 

 

 

 

From  "Living Like This"

Street vendor Carlisle Rd,Bradford West Yorkshire UK.

Leica R8 with 35mm Elmarit.  Film is Kodak TRI-X in D76 stock

 

 

Wow.  Love that Tri-X!

 

From my project "Living Like This"

 

Madrasa in Bradford West Yorkshire UK.

 

Leica MP with 28mm Elmarit.  Film is Kodak TRI-X in D76 stock.

 

 

Really nice results, Edward.  

My first roll of Rollei RPX 400 came back from the lab. I like its rendering. Here are a few quick scans:

 

eiss 35/2.8-Rollei RPX 400 by edward karaa, on Flickr

 

36229055971_bf0b015c2e_o.jpgM7-Zeiss 35/2.8-Rollei RPX 400 by edward karaa, on Flickr

 

M7-Zeiss 35/2.8-Rollei RPX 400 by edward karaa, on Flickr

 

36229055231_807b287664_o.jpgM7-Zeiss 35/2.8-Rollei RPX 400 by edward karaa, on Flickr

 

Amazing, Dan.  Really enjoy these.

attachicon.gifuntitled236.jpg

taken with the Tele-Elmarit 90mm f2.8 "Fat" on the M4:

 

attachicon.gifciggy099.jpg

this with the 50mm Summicron

 

attachicon.gif0042-09a.jpg

and it's a guess whether this is the 50mm Summicron or 35mm Summaron f2.8 LtM - probably the 35?

 

LOVE the first one, Philip.  The colors in the first are amazing and I am impressed at the lack of pronounced vignetting with that old slow lens.

This is with one of the "dogs", the 2,8cm f6.3 Hektor.

 

36328943846_f5ef887283_b.jpg

Flickr

Velvia 100

 

And a close-up of the ship, shot on a different day. It's apparently the Elida

 

 

Flickr

90 Elmarit-M Velvia 100

 

Beautiful, Henry.

Yes Wayne  sea , waves ... the best well and faithfully reproduced by film color as b&w :)

 

 

Low tide and in Kodak TX400

 

 

35 Summilux Asph-MP

 

 

 

attachicon.gifImage5stmichkodtxlfhtsf++++-1000.jpg

 

Spots are not dust or scratch on sensor , but walkers  :D 

eh !  recognize you was afraid  !

 

Best

Henry

 

This one of the dog is CLASSIC.  Congrats!  You are giving Gary (gsgary) a run for his money with your Dog photography) :)

Second roll thro' the R5, this time Neopan 400.  These first two were on the High St with the 60mm Macro Elmarit-R.

 

1) In a charity shop window.

 

 

 

2) In need of a trim.

 

36406927315_1cbdec0a9c_b.jpg

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Calm and plenitude Jean-Marie

Very relaxing atmosphere and with film and the color , the best support

photo for the softness.

Jean-Marie you can find currently Agfa color 160 Isos ?

Thank you

Henry

Thank You Henry. First  let me tell You I do like both of Your Abbey photos - colour and B/W. I think the composition of the colour picture is maybe lightly more interesting in my eyes, but that depends also of what one intends to express with a photo. As a documentary picture, the B/W would be better.

 

And yes, I have a friend who ran a photo shop in the neighbour village . He had these Agfa Films - three of them, actually. My wife stole one and shot it today, then the third and last one was half/half ( that means 6 photos for her , 6 for me in the Rolleiflex... Rolleiflex that she also has "stolen" from me ;-) ... maybe Artie has any more rolls left, I shall ask him. If yes , I'll let You know and eventually send a roll to You.

Edited by blackandwhite
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Ran into the tricycle, again, today. I swear, I was not looking for it. Open sidewalk. The tiff is sharper.

 

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Leica R5, Schneider Kreuznach PA- Curtagon 35mm 4.0, Fuji Superia 800

 

 

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