Filtering by Tag: Kodak

JSMB - SLC

Added on by John Sturr.

This is the back side of the Joseph Smith Memorial Building - historically known as Hotel Utah.

This was restored and remodeled, by the LDS Church in the 1980's to become an administration type building.  

FFKR Architect's was hired for the original remodel and has since been involved in ongoing modifications.

YashicaMat124G - Kodak Ektar 100

Umbrella in the Mist

Added on by John Sturr.

I really like photos taken in the rain because it is a venue not very much captured -- and as luck would have it we had days and days of rain falling on a Saturday where I could take advantage to shoot.  As I was driving downtown - and as if it was planned - here was a colorful umbrella traveling the sidewalk on South Temple Street.

As much as I could - I got head enough in the car in order to pull over to take some frames. 

The scene really turned out well - as it was a serendipitous event all coming together.  And as much as I hate to say it - photography is all about the Serendipity -- seriously -- If you have the camera you may just come away as being the Rockstar with the one and only image of the event - whatever that may be.

Nikon F100 - Kodak Ektar 100


Timeless without the Cars

Added on by John Sturr.

Here's Lola again - with my wife Madeline. When Lola was around 10lbs. 

I love this image - combined with the look of film this brings me to a "Madmen" type scene -- with the hat and film base it looks like something from the fabulous 1950's.  

No lies here -- I don't know how fabulous the 50's really were as I wasn't born yet -- but I can't get over the nostalgia this image brings.  Too bad the cars are in the background - else it would have been timeless.

This is Kodak's Portra 400.  For its skin tone rendering - it has no peer.

Self developed with a C-41 Tetenal Kit - no crop.

Nikon F100 - 50mm f1.4 - Kodak Portra 400, Tetenal C-41 Kit


Make it so.

Added on by John Sturr.

There is a difference between Digital and Film.  

  • Digital is freeing - liberating - no development cost - easy - instant - shoot all you want - all you can eat.
  • Film is constraining - concerning - costs more - unknown - difficult - non instant - takes  chemicals

Both aspects have their plusses - but man - the digital side sounds like Crack Cocaine - I'm being facetious of course.  Don't do drugs.

If you are shooting film - I’ll let you decide why you do it - as based upon what I just outlined, well; I make it sound like film is dead:  Hardly.

YashicaMat124G - Kodak Portra

Here’s what I’m getting at — this whole film thing is constraining me from shooting.   I feel like I need have to have some kind of special image to shoot - like waiting for the Queen of England to walk by the house or something.  I’m on the porch waiting; right now — as I type this…. just kidding, no really - I am !  

Ok -- never mind - I just missed the shot.

So my goal these last few months of Summer - is to burn some frames — go hog wild on the mundane - the simple;  Cracks on the concrete - street signs at head level - the sky - Lola the Bulldog letting one rip - a blurred selfie.

I need to shoot 1 frame a day.  Make it so.

Whale watching in Ektar

Added on by John Sturr.

This is Ektar 100 again -- but with great light of the morning sunrise.  You have to move quickly and sort of guess at everything and hope you get something of it.  And when it all comes together - you wonder if it really was a guess.  

This is shot on the Yashica Mat 124G - 120 format.

DevScan by theFINDlab

Yashica Mat 124G - Ektar 100

Ektar 100

Added on by John Sturr.

I don't have much experience with Kodak's Ektar.  I've seen all the advertisements and I've heard all the hype.  Everything is true -- great for landscapes on desert islands - and you can't get away from the reds in the skintones.  The grain is really tight - be sure to nail your focus with great light and you may just have a winner.

This is 120 -- on the Yashica Mat 124G.  120 Format is gripping.

DevScan by theFindLab

Kodak Ektar - Yashica Mat 124G


Shooting Film

Added on by John Sturr.

When I was home over Thanksgiving I found some rolls of my past Fathers unshot film on his shelf - Kodakcolor 200, expired of course, as it was dated 2004.

And the idea of shooting this film came upon me.  At first I thought how nutty - and then the idea started to simmer a bit - and I became “film curious” again.

The last time I shot film was at ISU for an intro photo class.  It was quite the pain in the ass to say the least - but I slogged thru and worked the challenges.  Developing the B/W rolls was the easy part - but the most difficult was the printing in a communal setting.  I didn’t like that very much.

So - I dug out the FM-2, motordrive and 50mm f1.4.

“The Medium is the Message” — Marshall McLuhan.  

Aside from the most obvious difference, the film, Autofocus is the most game changing function of today’s systems.  AF was introduced on the Nikon pro side with the F4 - although some F3’s had a cobbed together system, it has allowed my technique to become abbreviated with a better outcome.

It would be difficult for me to use a non-AF system and still be relevant.

The shooting experience was about the same with the caveat that one must be able to trust their equipment as there is no “chimping”.  Development was a crap shoot - as it was done at the local grocery store but as luck would have it there is a nationally known lab close to SLC in Orem called theFind (Film Is Not Dead) - go figure.

This isn’t a cheap endeavor though - not counting the film, development was $12 - and at a theFind that would be about $22.

All in all it was an interesting experience - and I would be really interested in shooting Ilford Delta 3200 on an F5.  Until then I may just do this on the FM-2.