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Hi all - New guy here. Bought an M7 0.85 about a month ago. I've only put 4 rolls through it so far due to my work schedule, but I'm enjoying the M7 and film experience (again). i was a design and film student at Parsons and shot plenty of film in the early 80's through the late 90's, including 4x5's, Mamiya 7ii, Pentax Spotmatic, Contax G, etc., but I have been 100% digital since the Canon D30 was announced in 2001.

 

I tried MF last year using a Kowa Six kit, but it was too much. This year, I got the bug for 35mm film and, after a quick affair with a gorgeous Yashica GX, I picked up the M7.

 

I just posted some photos taken with CineStill films in the "Film" forum: https://www.l-camera-forum.com/topic/280381-cinestill-film-in-brooklyn-and-nyc/

 

Here are a few more. All M7 + Nokton 50/1.5, and CineStill films. "CineStill" is movie film stock that has been modified for use in 35mm still cameras and normal C-41 processing. The 800T is for "Tungsten" (or Fluorescent) lighting, and low light. The 50D is Daylight balanced, and is good for bright daylight like at the beach or skiing (which is where I'll be going next!).

 

CineStill 800T - Art Gallery window. John St., DUMBO Brooklyn

DSC01223.jpg

 

Ample Hills Creamery. Pier 5, Brooklyn Bridge Park.

DSC01241.jpg

 

CineStill 50D - Sculpture under the Archway at Washington Square Park, NY.

DSC01206.jpg

 

SALE. 5th Avenue @20th St., NYC.

 

 

Flatiron Building. 5th Ave. 23rd St., NYC.

DSC01213.jpg

 

Hi , as I say in "I love M7"'s thread you are welcome !

Cinestill comes from movie film by Kodak isn't It gives a particular but very nice color

James or Christoph or Adam here use it.

You'll see M7 is one of the best camera IMO and as said Raymond Depardon the faster M

for street photo it's perfect IMO

Thanks for sharing

The pictures 1,2,4 are specially nice

Best

Henry

Edited by Doc Henry
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Eastern Station

Paris dec 2017

 

Kodak TX400-Leica MP-50 Summilux Asph

 

 

 

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Best

Henry

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M6, 50mm Summilux v. 2, Fuji Velvia 100

 

 

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.

The Thames between London Bridge and Tower Bridge.

 

Leica IIIf and Voigtländer 15/4.5 Super-wide Heliar with Tri-X.

 

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Very nice winter scene Chris.

 

M2, 35FLE, XP2, EI 100, HC-110, X1 scan:

 

27577995229_6e2ee100de_c.jpg

The Road Through the Woods by chrism229, on Flickr

 

I agree with you that photos depicting life have more 'value' in some respect. Do you know anything about these photos?

 

 

I don't know PMK but from this it seems it's a great developer. Very nice tonality here.

 

Rolleiflex 3.5/75mm. FP4+ in PMK, nice combination! Although I had to bring back the head of the watering can a lot, it sure has rich blacks.

 

Absolutely fantastic shot. Welcome to the thread, too

 

Hasselblad 501cm, 80 Planar, HP5 plus, Imacon 848

 

attachicon.gifManu a.jpg

 

This is nice Patrick, great mood.

 

Velvia 100F

M6

Summicron 35

 

San Francisco September 2017

 

Welcome to the thread. These are nice photos. I'm personally in two minds about Cinestill. What I've shot has suffered quality-wise from strange dirt on the negs when I have received them back from the lab so I don't touch it anymore. It's unfortunate because I like the colour rendering.

 

Hi all - New guy here. Bought an M7 0.85 about a month ago. I've only put 4 rolls through it so far due to my work schedule, but I'm enjoying the M7 and film experience (again). i was a design and film student at Parsons and shot plenty of film in the early 80's through the late 90's, including 4x5's, Mamiya 7ii, Pentax Spotmatic, Contax G, etc., but I have been 100% digital since the Canon D30 was announced in 2001.

 

I tried MF last year using a Kowa Six kit, but it was too much. This year, I got the bug for 35mm film and, after a quick affair with a gorgeous Yashica GX, I picked up the M7.

 

I just posted some photos taken with CineStill films in the "Film" forum: https://www.l-camera-forum.com/topic/280381-cinestill-film-in-brooklyn-and-nyc/

 

Here are a few more. All M7 + Nokton 50/1.5, and CineStill films. "CineStill" is movie film stock that has been modified for use in 35mm still cameras and normal C-41 processing. The 800T is for "Tungsten" (or Fluorescent) lighting, and low light. The 50D is Daylight balanced, and is good for bright daylight like at the beach or skiing (which is where I'll be going next!).

 

CineStill 800T - Art Gallery window. John St., DUMBO Brooklyn

DSC01223.jpg

 

Ample Hills Creamery. Pier 5, Brooklyn Bridge Park.

DSC01241.jpg

 

CineStill 50D - Sculpture under the Archway at Washington Square Park, NY.

DSC01206.jpg

 

SALE. 5th Avenue @20th St., NYC.

DSC01209.jpg

 

Flatiron Building. 5th Ave. 23rd St., NYC.

DSC01213.jpg

 

Pete! Great to see you posting here. That's a nice inky reflection, I think. 

 

.

The Thames between London Bridge and Tower Bridge.

 

Leica IIIf and Voigtländer 15/4.5 Super-wide Heliar with Tri-X.

 

attachicon.gifReflection Thames London Bridge.jpg

 

Lovely colours and a wonderful boat, Helge. Must take quite some effort to maintain.

 

Oselvar - a traditional Norwegian wooden boat, formed like a simplified, miniature version of the Viking ships. Built by my uncle in the 1960ies, by the way.

 

Mamiya 7, 43mm, Provia 100.

 

 

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I'm working' on it, Eoin :)

Yes! - Adam's Winter Season is on. We just need some snow...

I love seeing these shots, Adam - Particularly the wind-blown furry face-frames (otherwise known as hoods).

 

By golly, that IS a nipple!  Love it! :)

A scantily clad gentleman Slash impersonator.

 

Arcachon

 

 

Flickr

50/1.4A Portra 160(80)

 

Hubba hubba - love this one :)

Hasselblad 501cm, 80 Planar, HP5 plus, Imacon 848

 

attachicon.gifManu a.jpg

 

Very nice results!  I especially like the last one.   Seems  like you might be a New Yorker.  I planning to go shooting in Central Park at 4am tomorrow (Sunday) to capture the snowy scenes from today's dusting if you'd like to join me...

Hi all - New guy here. Bought an M7 0.85 about a month ago. I've only put 4 rolls through it so far due to my work schedule, but I'm enjoying the M7 and film experience (again). i was a design and film student at Parsons and shot plenty of film in the early 80's through the late 90's, including 4x5's, Mamiya 7ii, Pentax Spotmatic, Contax G, etc., but I have been 100% digital since the Canon D30 was announced in 2001.

 

I tried MF last year using a Kowa Six kit, but it was too much. This year, I got the bug for 35mm film and, after a quick affair with a gorgeous Yashica GX, I picked up the M7.

 

I just posted some photos taken with CineStill films in the "Film" forum: https://www.l-camera-forum.com/topic/280381-cinestill-film-in-brooklyn-and-nyc/

 

Here are a few more. All M7 + Nokton 50/1.5, and CineStill films. "CineStill" is movie film stock that has been modified for use in 35mm still cameras and normal C-41 processing. The 800T is for "Tungsten" (or Fluorescent) lighting, and low light. The 50D is Daylight balanced, and is good for bright daylight like at the beach or skiing (which is where I'll be going next!).

 

CineStill 800T - Art Gallery window. John St., DUMBO Brooklyn

 

 

Ample Hills Creamery. Pier 5, Brooklyn Bridge Park.

 

 

CineStill 50D - Sculpture under the Archway at Washington Square Park, NY.

 

 

SALE. 5th Avenue @20th St., NYC.

 

 

Flatiron Building. 5th Ave. 23rd St., NYC.

 

 

Very nice!  
Hope you will share some more!

.

The Thames between London Bridge and Tower Bridge.

 

Leica IIIf and Voigtländer 15/4.5 Super-wide Heliar with Tri-X.

 

attachicon.gifReflection Thames London Bridge.jpg

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Oselvar - a traditional Norwegian wooden boat, formed like a simplified, miniature version of the Viking ships. Built by my uncle in the 1960ies, by the way.

 

Mamiya 7, 43mm, Provia 100.

 

Wow! This is a killer shot - what a superb feeling of gliding over that water! Thank you helged.

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I spent today catching up on my developing, I have 8 rolls of film and three sheets of 4x5 hanging and drying. I'm scanning one film tonight, the rest will wait until tomorrow.

 

Some place in Paris, November 2017, Olympus XA2, Ektar 100.

 

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Great photo packages with a very interesting story.   Thanks for sharing and wishing you and yours a happy and healthy new year!

It’s New Years Eve so perhaps you’ll bear with me. There’s a little story behind this picture…

 

 

This portrait was made during the incredible workshop that I attended back in 2011, which was conducted by Mary Ellen Mark in Oaxaca, Mexico.

Mary Ellen gave us some options of places to shoot - places she’d sent attendees in the past, knowing they came back with good pictures. For me, it was a choice between the town dump and the slaughterhouse. I chose the dump. She told us we’d need gumboots, as we’d be walking in trash, so the girl I went there with, Ari, and I got our taxi to stop at a shoe shop en route. I couldn’t buy gumboots anywhere near my size so I bought the only things I could find big enough - some cheap tennis shoes.  There was a fruit shop next door to the shoe shop so we also bought water and oranges.

When we got to the dump Ari and I separated and went trudging in different directions through mountains of trash. Eventually I met this man and, as we walked, we conversed - not that I could speak Spanish, nor could he speak English - we communicated by gesture. He lived with his dogs (there’s one behind him) in a hut at the edge of the dump and worked there every day, filling large bags with stuff he might be able to sell. He graciously agreed to let me take his picture. He was (and hopefully still is) such a dignified man. I gave him my oranges and, noticing he had none, my shoes, ending my trip to the dump barefoot. Later, on hearing of this, people thought I was either crazy or incredibly kind and generous, but I just felt manifestly inadequate having made such a small gesture - it was the very least I felt I could have done. The experience of meeting this man was a very powerful one for me - he never asked me for anything - and he lived with the dignity that is so evident in this picture even though, by any standard, he had so very little.

The picture also involved technical challenges. I was using Ilford XP2 Super film, which is nominally 400ISO but can be successfully overexposed to some extent (and underexposed according to ChrisM’s fascinating experiments). It was incredibly hot and bright at the dump, and I wanted to use some fill flash so as to get some light to his face, which was well shaded by his hat. Leica M’s having just 1/50 sec as a maximum sync speed meant I had to stack the only two colour filters I had with me - a green and a yellow - on the 28mm Elmarit lens and I still had to use the minimum aperture (f16). Even then I was overexposing the box speed by two stops - effectively 100ISO. Setting my Nikon SB25 flash to half power I hoped it would all work out - and this time, fortunately, it did.

What this story illustrates perfectly to me is that photography enables us to experience so much that maybe we wouldn’t otherwise. If it weren’t for the workshop I’d probably never have gone to Mexico, and certainly never to the town dump. I’d never have met this man whose quiet dignity will forever stay with me - not just in a picture - this was a real, live experience and I can still recall us talking, and even remember the heat and the acrid stench of the dump; can almost still feel the slimy rubbish oozing through my toes after I’d passed on my shoes. I’ll never forget the lessons my short encounter with this man taught me in acceptance, dignity and humility. Hell, I’d never have met my valued mentor Mary Ellen Mark or some of the wonderful people I still maintain contact with.

It taught me why I love photography so much - working out solutions to problems, sharing unimaginable experiences with other photographers. Being IN the world and experiencing its delights, its vicissitudes and having the opportunity to come away with something tangible, personal and meaningful. A photograph.

Have a happy, healthy and fulfilling 2018.

 

Very nice, Mike, particularly from that little Oly :)

I spent today catching up on my developing, I have 8 rolls of film and three sheets of 4x5 hanging and drying. I'm scanning one film tonight, the rest will wait until tomorrow.

 

Some place in Paris, November 2017, Olympus XA2, Ektar 100.

 

attachicon.gifSheet074_003.jpg

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Great photo packages with a very interesting story.   Thanks for sharing and wishing you and yours a happy and healthy new year!

 

Very nice, Mike, particularly from that little Oly :)

 

I've been on the fence about this camera as a daily pocket camera, I haven't been happy with the couple of rolls of black and white I have put through it but this Ektar seems to suit it.

 

I hope to post a bunch of photos tomorrow, you may recognize some of them. :)

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I've been on the fence about this camera as a daily pocket camera, I haven't been happy with the couple of rolls of black and white I have put through it but this Ektar seems to suit it.

 

I hope to post a bunch of photos tomorrow, you may recognize some of them. :)

 

looking forward.  I am scanning some from our walk right now :)

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