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Photography F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 01 10:53 pm)
My favorite films are definitly all 3 "Lord of the Rings-movies"....love the scenery. When it comes to photo-film i am completely lost though.....
How come we say 'It's colder than hell outside' when
isn't it realistically always colder than hell since hell is
supposed to be fire and brimstone?
____________________
Andreas
Mystic
Pic
Fugi Superia X-TRA 400 & Kodak Gold for anything under 400. I should go out and do some slides again. Quite different from making a DVD with jpgs an watching on the TV than hearing and smelling the slide projector.No stress when one of the viewrs runs up and sticks the fingers on a wall rather then the big screen TV to point out something.
"The happiness of a man in this life does not consist in the
absence but in the mastery of his passions."
affraid me too.. when l read favourite film.. straightaway thought mmmmmm..."Sleepless in seattle" and "The Pearl Earring".. and "Carry on up the Kyber"... no always in the olden days used fuji label..some times kodak gold iso 100... nikki :).... hahahah tedz :)
I Discovered the secret of the sea in mediation upon the dewdrop ... Sand and Foam Gibran
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Attached Link: tp
Aside from Infrared film, I loved using Kodak TechPan 50 ASA film. There was no sharper 35mm B&W film available on the market, and the details you could pull from a negative were nothing short of amazing. The downside was that it was very sensitive and exact exposure and developing were required to make the most of it. Has anyone else ever used it? http://www.sbccphoto.org/show_Tip.asp?ID=1 Developing method. A quote from Rich Oasen: "Years ago, there was an article about TechPan film that had just come out from Kodak," says Oasen, "and people were saying they would look at a picture or negative and they'd see a dust spot. They started blowing it up. Suddenly, that dust speck turns out to be an airplane in the background that was flying through the scene that the photographer didn't even know about." As far as favorite movie films...too many to name. =]Kort Kramer - Kramer Kreations
No favourites but i'm currently using Ilford Pan F50 (for summer...lol) and Fuji Neopan 400 and Superia 400 and 800. Not seen the Kodak Techpan film here...going to try out Tri-X 400 soon :) edit: Just looked at the link, some good shots there, looks like a fine film (pun intended :))
Message edited on: 09/24/2005 01:20
Pictures appear to me, I shoot them. Elliot Erwitt
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I do. While I shoot mostly Kodak Gold 400 for general purpose photography I absolutely love Fujifilm's Provia 100F slide film. It is so much fun loading the slides into the projector and seeing them huge on the wall with crystal clarity. The film gives me everything I expect to be in the image and the colors are just how I see them. It is fast enough to capture a lot of action but it also has a noticeable lack of grain. Anybody else have a favorite they would like to share?