I've recently started playing around with a Canon AE-1 Program and I was wondering if anyone else on here shoots film. I'm heading to New York this weekend and I'm super excited to try two different rolls.
I shoot loads of film for my personal, vanilla, and industry work.I've recently started playing around with a Canon AE-1 Program and I was wondering if anyone else on here shoots film. I'm heading to New York this weekend and I'm super excited to try two different rolls.
This is a simple question... the answer is not .That's really cool! Do you have a favorite camera or type of film? I've been shooting Kodak Gold 200 and I just ordered some Portra 800.
I've recently started playing around with a Canon AE-1 Program and I was wondering if anyone else on here shoots film. I'm heading to New York this weekend and I'm super excited to try two different rolls.
I shoot with a Petax K1000, and this film I use is Kodak Gold 400! I love shooting film, and I have been thinking about making some photo sets for MFC using film, because I love the look of it over digital.I've recently started playing around with a Canon AE-1 Program and I was wondering if anyone else on here shoots film. I'm heading to New York this weekend and I'm super excited to try two different rolls.
All of my favorite, and most popular photo sets are shot on film! (By mister shutterbuck up there) Even my ACF avatar is film haha.I shoot with a Petax K1000, and this film I use is Kodak Gold 400! I love shooting film, and I have been thinking about making some photo sets for MFC using film, because I love the look of it over digital.
You should have some local options but always ask questions before dropping your film off. If you’re dropping off at Walmart, know that they send your film to someone else .Where do you guys get your 35mm film developed? I used a drug store (idr which) and they kept my negatives which I kinda wanted back.
You should have some local options but always ask questions before dropping your film off. If you’re dropping off at Walmart, know that they send your film to someone else .
Most one-hour joints don’t replenish their chemistry as often as they should these days since they just don’t see as much film as they used to.
I used to process and scan my own film but this has been made impossible by my travels.
Since, I’ve used Indie Film Lab (indiefilmlab.com) and Richard Photo Lab (richardphotolab.com) I may try The Darkroom Lab at some point (thedarkroom.com) but I really like a lab I can grow with... the more you process with a particular lab, the more they will get to know you and how you like your shit to look. Communication of your preferences with your lab and providing feedback on your scans can only improve the quality of your scans.
I’ve personally noticed that Indie Film Lab really leans on the reputation of their preferred shooters. I feel like I don’t get the service and attention to detail in my scans that popular shooters get. Or that of the wedding shooters that send in 50 weddings a year for processing. I’ve noticed poor attention to detail and even just sloppy cloning in cleaning up dust spots on my B&W scans (B&W scanners are not very capable of recognizing and correcting dust/scratches and thus have to be cleaned up manually in PS). I’ve also experienced poor/inconsistent color correction from them. In portrait work I almost always shoot the whole roll in the same lighting conditions. If my light doesn’t change, my settings don’t change... there is absolutely no reason I should have to correct a green/magenta shift between two consecutive frames when I get my scans back. IFL does mail your negs back but they do not cut them.
TIP: Make sure you choose “no” on their order forms if you don’t want them sharing your photos on Instagram!
Richard Photo Lab on the other hand, has been really great! They’re slightly more expensive than IFL but they have been around a lot longer, too. They post regularly to their Instagram with expected turnaround times as seasons (end of wedding season) and workloads change.
My scans are consistent and I have never had to make any color correction to my scans from Richard.
TIP: Richard only returns 72dpi scans. You need to resize to your print dimensions at 300dpi in PS if you want to print from scans.
Richard also sends your negs back and you can choose between cut or uncut.
If I ever try The Darkroom, I’ll update ya. I may just send them one or two rolls sometime soon just for shits’n’giggles but for the time being, Richard is my preferred lab.
I mailed off my last rolls to Richard last Thursday(10 days ago). USPS arrived on Saturday (attempted delivery due to weekend closure) but were not received until Tuesday due to the holiday weekend. I got my scans back (13 rolls total) by Friday at around noon. 8 day turnaround including my shipping ain’t bad! And the tracking on my negatives says I’ll get them back tomorrow.I was just tweeting about needing a new lab. I’ve been using IFL for the past few rolls, and their work is fine (especially for someone like me just starting out), but their turnaround times are getting increasingly more unbearable and there’s no online order status checking. I know film is slow, but they advertise their turnaround as 5-7 days, tell you AFTER they get your film that it’s more like 10-15, and I’ve started getting rolls back after 20-30 days.