For the past couple of years, I’ve compiled a list of my favorite film cameras, and written about them. In 2022 was the first one, and last year I wrote what I suspected might be the last and final word on it. So much for that idea.
Continue reading…Wesley King
Pushing Eastman 5203 (Kodak Vision3 50) Color Negative Film
I’ll confess that in general, I’m a box speed guy, meaning that I customarily shoot films at the speed they’re rated at on the product packaging, whether that’s an ISO test result (where a film is expressly labeled as something like “ISO 100”), or whether it’s an EI — an exposure index — which is basically the film manufacturer’s recommended shooting speed, but which has not been subjected to the actual ISO testing procedure to establish its speed. But pushing film, which is intentionally underexposing it and then adjusting development times to compensate, is a popular thing to do. Kodak’s Vision3 motion picture films, which are an increasingly popular choice for still photography use, are rumored to handle pushing quite well, and I decided to see for myself just how well.
Continue reading…Review: Linhof Master Technika (Classic) Large Format Camera
My camera gear lust truly knows no boundaries. But in my defense, ever since I first got into large format photography, neither my Horseman L45 monorail camera (since sold) nor my Graflex Pacemaker 45 Crown Graphic quite seemed to completely scratch my large format itch. The Horseman is (well, was) quite simply too big and too heavy for serious field work (it’s not what monorails were even designed for), and the Graphic, as much as I love it, doesn’t provide enough view camera movements to be considered much of a contender for serious large format work — where perspective control, and depth-of-field control, through the use of those movements are central to the art form. Quite literally the only camera in existence that combines all the use cases of a monorail camera and a press camera into a single package is the Linhof Master Technika, or Master Technika Classic (more on that distinction later), and it’s the reason I’d wanted one for years. I never thought I’d have the opportunity, but it presented itself, and I think I have pretty well found my photographic capstone, not just for my large format endeavors, but for my film camera collection as a whole.
Continue reading…My (Renewed) Commitment to Film Photography
After months of deliberation, analysis, thinking, and planning, and despite recently purchasing a new high-end digital camera and using it extensively, I recently made a modest investment that I view as a demonstration of my commitment to film photography: I bought a 400-foot (122m) roll of 35mm Kodak Vision3 50D, or what I prefer to call by the name exposed onto the film rebate itself: Eastman 5203. The equivalent of 74 rolls of 36-exposure film, it means I’m going to have a lot of 35mm color photography ahead of me for months, certainly, but likely years to come.
Continue reading…Review: Nikon F5 135 (35mm) Film Camera
As I pointed-out in my review of the Nikon F4, I’ve said many times over the years that, “I’m just not a Nikon guy.” I also pointed-out that I was walking those words back a bit at that point. And now, as I sit down to write this review, I’m forced the reckon with an inconvenient truth: I am, now, indisputably, “a Nikon guy.” I didn’t see it coming, really, but the acquisition of a Nikon F5 professional SLR is the straw that broke the proverbial camel’s back. What else did I not see coming? How very much I could actually love a modern, highly electronic camera from what I refer to as the “new school” of SLR camera design.
Continue reading…Review: Minolta XG 1 (XG-1) 135 (35mm) Film Camera
Do you remember your first real film camera? Do you still have it? I do — and I still have mine. That camera? The Minolta XG 1, introduced in 1979, and later (in 1982) very subtly renamed (with a hyphen) as the XG-1, at which time it also received Minolta’s updated, so-called “rising sun” logo. I’ve been writing content here for years, and somehow or another, despite it being my first decent camera, I’ve overlooked writing a formal review of it despite mentioning it in other articles and reviews dozens of times. After the camera received a CLA recently, its first servicing in the 43 years I’ve owned it, I was reminded how much I love the camera, and love using it — and it was about time I shared both its story, and my feelings about it.
Continue reading…Side-by-Side: ECN-2 vs. C-41 Processing for Kodak Vision3 Film
In the past several years, as film prices rise and film choices diminish, it’s become quite common to tap into 35mm film stocks that are ordinarily sold for motion picture use, and adapt them for still photography. Nudging us all down that path are dozens of companies (and even individuals) who are buying the motion picture stocks in bulk, cutting them down, loading them into 135 roll film cassettes, and selling them at retail, or via online marketplaces. While Eastman 5222, also known as Kodak Double-X, is a common black-and-white motion picture film that’s long been packaged and used for still photography, the practice is increasingly popular in the past few years for color films, namely Kodak’s Vision3 stocks. These films, however, have some unique attributes that make them unsuitable for most lab development, and challenging for home processing as well. Among them is the fact that technically speaking, they’re designed for the ECN-2 process (and chemicals), not the more common C-41 process of developing standard color negative films for still photography. In this article, we dive into the differences, and what you need to know to get great results from these films.
Continue reading…Review: Nikon F4 135 (35mm) Film Camera
Over the years, I’ve uttered these exact words, multiple times: “I’m just not a Nikon guy.” But these days, I find myself walking those words back a bit. I wouldn’t necessarily define myself as a “Nikon guy” even now, but I have definitely carved-out a spot in my photographic heart for the beloved Japanese camera and optical brand, having now, with the Nikon F4, discovered for myself what others have apparently long known.
Continue reading…My Favorite Film Cameras: 2023 (The Evergreen Edition?)
Early in 2022, on a whim, I wrote an article titled, My Favorite Film Cameras: 2022. I’m not sure what, exactly, prompted me to write it, apart from just obsessing over cameras — my passion running over as my collection of cameras continued to grow. Since then, the collection has only continued to grow, although now, in mid-2023, the pace of expansion has slowed nearly to a stop. In part, that’s because I’m focusing more attention on actually using my cameras, but moreover, it’s just getting to the point where I’ve experienced all the cameras I really ever sought to experience. Any remaining in the “yet-to-be-experienced” group are, at this point, simply too expensive to justify buying. This includes any Leica you care to name, a more recent Rolleiflex than the one I already own, a Mamiya 7, a Pentax 67, and maybe a handful of others.
As I thought about updating the list for 2023, the challenge of whittling-down and sorting it to just ten examples became became an impossible task. The more I thought about it, the more clear it became that my “favorites” can easily be segmented by type, and within each, there’s an obvious stratification.
Additionally, it feels like the resulting list isn’t likely to change in the future — hence the phrase in the title, “The Evergreen Edition?”. I did put a question mark at the end because, well, who knows. For the moment, I’ll just call this my 2023 list.
Continue reading…Review: Nikon FE 135 (35mm) Film Camera
Last year, I surpassed the 200 camera mark in my film camera collection, and out of those, only one camera sported the name Nikon: My mother’s mid-1980s N2000 (known as the F-301 outside of North America), which I inherited when she passed a few years ago. It had been a gift to her from my father, and despite its simplicity, it was a little too much camera for her, and saw very little use. When I finally got around to using it, I came away relatively unimpressed. That was a few years ago, and while I need to give it a second chance, my sour opinion of it left me wondering why so many people are so enamored of Nikon cameras, and haven’t ever been able to shake the feeling that I was simply missing something. Recently, I seem to have gotten a glimpse of the reasons for all that Nikon Love among a certain subset of film camera enthusiasts.
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