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They are just so much smoother and more natural looking in my opinion.......
I would love getting a GOOD analogue camara (Polaroid (Probably INSTANT would be the best as I reckon there is nowhere to develop it now :( (Unless ya had your own dark room I suppose))) |
Re: Anyone like analogue photos?
my kids enjoy sitting with my mum and looking at old family photos in a photo album.
I've used photobox to make photo album books from digital photos as it's nice to have and hold, and easier to flick through them. I think it wa 7 day shop were still selling film, but it was very expensive, as you say, I don't think you can just take it to the high street now and choose who has the best deal to get it developed, or send it off to one of those companies which returned your photos weeks later with a "free" film :) My mum had a Polaroid, didn't use it much as cartridges were so expensive, was saved for special occasions, on holiday abroad where she wanted to be 100% she had that photo of that special moment :) |
Re: Anyone like analogue photos?
'Polaroid' and 'good' should never be used in the same sentence. Polaroids were a novelty purely for the instant results, and you can get that at a fraction of the cost from the cheapest mobile phone now, with better picture quality.
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Re: Anyone like analogue photos?
I still have my 35mm camera (Konica FS-1) and all the lenses and filters that I loved to use. A full set of darkroom kit for B+W and colour. But it's all been sat unused for 20 years. I have several digital cameras too, but rarely take any photos.
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Re: Anyone like analogue photos?
I used to be a keen photographer with my 35mm Nikon FT2 and a selection of lenses including my favorite 28-100 F3.5 zoom. Great all occasions lens.
Like Taf I've not done any film photography for years. All my photographs in the albums were scanned into the PC at 4800dpi a few years ago. I bought an A4 flatbed scanner (HP Scanjet 5p) specifically for the project. Something like 4,000 pictures. Cross catalogued and accessible in seconds. |
Re: Anyone like analogue photos?
What's wrong with a pinhole camera? You can keep your megapixels.
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Re: Anyone like analogue photos?
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Re: Anyone like analogue photos?
I was thinking about this recently.
Years ago, on a photo developing course, we were asked to print an image from a single colour negative onto several brands of colour photo paper. All came out differently, and the reason was "gamut". Different papers react differently across the spectrum they are being asked to recreate. One might have brighter reds, another duller greens, and some don't react to some colours at all (especially fluorescent tones). The same thing happens between a digital photo and monitors and printers. So if you are trying to print something with, for example, a specific blue used in a company logo, you might hit snags. Even your camera sensor has its own gamut, so you can get tied in knots unless you have expertise in colour balancing and/or the pantone system. |
Re: Anyone like analogue photos?
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Re: Anyone like analogue photos?
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But they dont look at natural looking Mate...I have seen some digital prints and they have a very rough look.. (Maybe its how they were done)
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Re: Anyone like analogue photos?
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When you had a camera you bought a film, took your pictures and the took the film to a store to develop and print them. Forgetting Polorids , which as Chris says were a novelty. you take your film in ( or send it off ) to be developed and printed. The machine that did it is set at "one for all". It didn't care if one frame was over or under exposed it just developed all frames the same and printed them. I have in the past taken over and underexposed negatives, scanned them and produced high quality prints from them thanks to the digital platform. The people I did it for were over the moon as in quite a few cases they were of family gone. It was not a business but a hobby and friends asked if I could do it. Maximum charge:- buy me a pint next time you see me. |
That interesting mate,thank you for that :)
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Re: Anyone like analogue photos?
The thing I hate is HDR images that seem way too sharpened.
A bit of blurryness can be a good thing. |
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