- Where: Partnachklamm, Garmisch-Partenkirchen
- Camera: Rolleiflex Tele 135
- Lens: Carl Zeiss Sonnar 135mm f/4
- Film: Fuji Velvia 50 (probably)
The Partnachklamm (Partnach-Gorge) is located in the town of Garmisch-Partenkirchen in a valley on the german parts of the Alps. The parking lot near the entry to the Partnachklamm is located right next to the ramp that is used for ski jump events of the Olympic winter games. I shot these pictures during winter on (I think) Fuji Velvia 50 in an attempt to look at the positive side of shooting the Rolleiflex Tele 135. The camera is great, but it tends to eat film when you do not treat it exactly right. Some of the pictures did not come out too well, probably because of the cold weather. Thus, I decided to jump to the B&W filter and turn most pictures into 50 shades of… you know what.
- Where: New York, Manhattan
- Camera: Hasselblad 503CX
- Lens: Zeiss Planar 80mm f2.8
- Film: Fuji NPS 160 (probably)
A work and leisure trip to the rotten apple. Because I do not shoot film in the pursuit of the dreamy, nostalgic, dare say “vintage” look. I shoot film because I collect ways to unintentionally mess up. And I am getting pretty good at it. These are 5 frames that originally were meant to be beautiful color images from around the Big Apple, but I royally messed up development. This was years ago. Sifting through my archives for things that I could create blog posts with, I tend to stumble over these ugly results and think to myself: “What would that look like with some heavy editing and a B&W filter slapped on top of it?” The answer is: Decent. Not like in “That looks decent.”, but more like in a short reprieve from the descent into the madness that is “shooting film”.
- Where: New York, Manhattan
- Camera: Fuji GW690 III
- Lens: EBC Fujinon 90mm f/3.5
- Film: Fuji NPS 160 (probably)
A work and leisure trip to New York.
- Where: Somewhere in Bavaria
- Camera: Nikon F6
- Lens: Nikkor 50mm f/1.2
- Film: Fuji Eterna RDI
Another walk near the lake. This is the second roll of Fuji Eterna RDI that I shot in a real-world scenario. The color cast is probably due to under-exposure. I set the camera to ISO 6 + 1 stop (so basically ISO 3). Re-Evaluating my previous experiments, I think the next real-world test will be exposed partially at ISO 6 + 2 stops and ISO 6 + 3 stops. That way I can get a better idea of which exposure I like better. The images are all quite dark. Increasing the exposure in DxO PhotoLab 3 only made the color cast worse, so I left it as is.
Fuji Eterna CI is another intermediate film stock for cinematographic purposes. Unlike Fuji Eterna RDI, which I tested in a previous post, it is not meant to be written by an Arrilaser. Nonetheless, I wasn’t able to find a reliable number for ISO for this film, so I took another set of test images. Having learned a little from previous such endeavors, I included a post-it with the camera settings in each photo. Given that the scene is mostly white, with a little bit of black from the color chart, I did the following steps after developing the film:
- Scan with the Nikon CoolScan LS 9000 and VueScan set to directly save the RAW negative (including dust removal).
- Post-process in DxO PhotoLab 3: Convert to positive Adjust the exposure to get the histogram evenly spread. Level the R, G, and B histograms.
This way I get roughly the same brightness for each image. In addition, looking at the R, G, and B histogram before leveling, provides an impression of how bad the color cast probably will be in real-life scenarios. I then give my unprofessional judgment on the resulting images by looking at the bright and dark areas, with a focus on the latter.
To my eyes, and with my memories of the histograms, ISO 1.5 to ISO 0.75 look reasonable for Fuji Eterna CI. The yellow-ish color cast is partially due to my laziness and roughly leveling the R, G, and B histograms.
- Where: Somewhere in Bavaria
- Camera: Nikon F6
- Lens: Nikkor 50mm f/1.2
- Film: Fuji Eterna RDI
A short walk around town to get some fresh air and snap some shots. This was one of the first rolls of Fuji Eterna RDI that I shot in real-world conditions. I messed up the development (it was either the Rem-Jet removal overnight or messing up the order of the chemicals when mixing the developer) and the exposure time was a bit too short. In general, the images came out very faint and with a strong color cast. Converted to B&W to see if I can get some kind of interesting image out of this mess. Some frames still have some Rem-Jet residue on them.
A nearby forest on a late sunny fall day.
- Where: Somewhere in Bavaria
- Camera: Leica CL
- Lens: Leica C Summicron 40mm f/2
- Film: Fuji Eterna 400T
A short walk around town to get some fresh air and snap some shots, mixed with a day trip to the Alpspitz. Messed up development (it was either the Rem-Jet removal overnight or messing up the order of the chemicals when mixing the developer) and some light leaks from the film cartridge. Converted to B&W to see if I can get some kind of interesting image out of this mess.
- Where: Somewhere in Bavaria
- Camera: Yashica Mat 124G
- Lens: Yashinon 80mm f/3.5
- Film: Ilford Pan F+ (ISO 50)
A visit to the Andechs monastery.
- Where: Somewhere in Bavaria
- Camera: Leica CL
- Lens: Leica 40mm Summicron-C f/2
- Film: Fuji Eterna 400T
Shots from a recent walk during a short vacation.