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There's a new Naked Cowboy in town...


A miller

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And he is quite the comedian...

These shots were taken with my M3 and 35mm lux fle.

 

I used CineStill 800 ISO tungsten film, which, for those who aren't familiar, is a film originally produced by Kodak for cinemas and was packaged by a third party into 35mm rolls. I knew nothing about this film until a few weeks ago when another forumite suggested it in a thread on the Film Forum.

 

It is quite nice from the perspective of enabling up to 3 stops of pushing with good results. It has a nice "analog" feel...

 

The following are exposures developed at normal 800 ISO (no pushing).

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There used to be several companies that sold cine film repackaged as still film (Seattle Film Works was one) with the primary attraction being that when you sent in the film for processing you got back both prints and slides and a free roll of film. A friend of mine used to buy what were call "short ends" of film from movie production companies and resell it to these companies making a profit of several cents per foot. The disadvantages were that you were locked into using that company for processing and printing because it was not the standard C-41 color process and the tendency of the film to be easily scratched as the cine file did not contain a hardened emulsion like a still film. 35mm cine cameras were far gentler on film than a still camera so the cine film did not contain the same scratch resistant formulation as still films.

 

Useless information from the dark ages....

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