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Matthew Griffiths
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 17 ส.ค. 2012
Tutorial: Double Exposures - Whole Film Roll Method
Learn how to shoot Double Exposures using the whole film roll method.
In this tutorial we load the 35mm film, shoot the whole roll, then wind back and reload it for your second exposures. We look at some tips and tricks to not mess it up, as well as how to get the film out of the roll once it's been wound back!
For this video I used my Pentax K1000 and a roll of black and white Ilford Delta 400.
To see how I shoot Double Exposures one at a time, using my film rewind button go here: th-cam.com/video/1em9_6t748I/w-d-xo.html
00:00 Introduction to Double Exposures
00:47 How to shoot Double Exposures if you don't have a film rewind button
01:26 Load your 35mm film
01:38 How to mark your film for Double Exposures
02:00 Tips on shooting Double Exposures on film
02:49 Wind back and reload your film for Double Exposures
03:35 How to get 35mm film back out of a cannister after winding back (Double Exposure)
04:28 Lining up film for second, double exposure.
05:23 The results of me shooting double exposures using the blind whole roll method!
In this tutorial we load the 35mm film, shoot the whole roll, then wind back and reload it for your second exposures. We look at some tips and tricks to not mess it up, as well as how to get the film out of the roll once it's been wound back!
For this video I used my Pentax K1000 and a roll of black and white Ilford Delta 400.
To see how I shoot Double Exposures one at a time, using my film rewind button go here: th-cam.com/video/1em9_6t748I/w-d-xo.html
00:00 Introduction to Double Exposures
00:47 How to shoot Double Exposures if you don't have a film rewind button
01:26 Load your 35mm film
01:38 How to mark your film for Double Exposures
02:00 Tips on shooting Double Exposures on film
02:49 Wind back and reload your film for Double Exposures
03:35 How to get 35mm film back out of a cannister after winding back (Double Exposure)
04:28 Lining up film for second, double exposure.
05:23 The results of me shooting double exposures using the blind whole roll method!
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Does it matter if the first exposure is the dark part or lighter part?
Only what is dark/black in the first exposure can be exposed again in the second. So if you took a pic of the bright sky on the first exposure there'd be nothing really left to work with - no unexposed (to light) film in your frame.
thank you brother
Do you need the marker if you grip the same hole in the film on the spool? For example, if you load the film by putting the second hole on the notch and then you load it again in the same exact way would it also make the frames align?
Hi, yeah that sounds like it would also work well.
Can't wait to try this. Good tips!
Howzit Matt, thanks for this great video. Those sound like Hardidah's in the background? I grew up in Joburg & went to Cape Tech. Just starting to shoot again with a Minolta SRT101 like my Dad used to use.
Haha either Hadidahs or Seagulls! (CPT) - that's awesome - hope you have fun!
AMAZING Tutorial thank you so much!!!!!
We have the same name
good picture of Granada by the way! thanks for the video
Thank you very much for making this tutorial. I can now try out some of these techniques with film.
wow i dint know you could use that button like that! Ive only ever used it for rewinding the whole roll!!!
2:36
your terminology is wrong. tilt is a thing and shift is another thing. what you did is tilting
Hi, with the rubber flexibility you can also shift the lens slightly. Although perhaps not enough to warrant having it in the title? I was also learning and figuring it out while doing this but if you think it's misleading I could at least change the thumb/title?
Fotodiox has very good quality adapters at a very reasonable price. Nice DIY
Nice tutorial! I came to perfect my loading method - thanks for that :) I’ve found it really helpful to increase the chance that the photos work out well, to keep the camera either portrait or landscape for both shots. Just a thought to increase chances of a solid combo (though of course there’s plenty examples which mixing works even better)
Ouu didn't think of this, thank you
I never thought about the rewind button for double exposures i thought u had to shot theough the whole film, or some cameras have a dedicated button for double exposures like the nikon fm.
beautiful thank you
Excellent vid .Just to note .Never use super glue in close proximity to your lenses ,as it will destroy the multi coating and leave a gold hue which becomes opaque ,so destrying your lens .So make sure the glue is fully set before proceeding to fit on your camera .By the way it will destroy your censor filter also .Be careful and patient to let all set well before fitting .I have made several diy lens projects ,just destroying 1 very good lens .Have fun but dont rush
KILLER
So sick!
Hello, I have been practising double exposures with upside exposures. Sometimes I like the results, but I want more control like how you did with the ground/sky photos. Where it looks flipped & mirrored. I have some stupid questions…. I overthink ha 1.) what do you mean by “cover up half the frame😢?” Do you mean cover up half of the subject you’re wanting to photograph from afar? Or do you mean cover up half the lens? 2.) whatever tool you’re using in the video is light coloured & not black. How are the sections you don’t want to expose black, when the tool you are using is light coloured? I’m sorry for so many questions. I’m just really trying to figure this out. And the college I attend basically wants us to teach ourselves. So I research a lot on my own & it’s a daunting process & discouraging when I can’t figure out how to do the things I want to do. Thank you.
Hey! No worries - so on those ones where I have the landscape (ground) on both sides - I'm covering half the frame with a black piece of card. So that half of the frame isn't exposed (then flip camera over and do the same thing the other way up). I do hold the card out a foot or two away - not ON the lens - because then it's easier to line things up and get a clear divide. I AM covering half the image frame though. Half of what I see through the viewfinder. Essentially for all of these double exposures - if you take a photo and there's black in it (in this case the card) then that bit can be exposed again. Hopefully that makes sense?
Thank you for this amazing tutorial!!
This is such a good tutorial. Most people tell me that I have to use the entire film first, rewind them and reuse them again.
Can i get some advice? I used a new roll but i'm certain the 1st and only shot was way too dark. Can i retrieve the roll out and put it in a new camera, then take photos as usual? Does that mean my first shot is going to be double exposure?
Hi, (a bit delayed) - Yes you could totally retrieve the roll and reuse it. If the first shot was almost/totally dark then you'd not notice but likely it captured something and will be a slight double exposure.
What you described is tilt, not shift.
Thank you so much for this tutorial! I've seen a lot of threads of people explaining it but I cannot understand without the visual! This is great.
Hola Matthew! I have a question, are all the photos exposed normally? Or do you underexpose them to half of normal so when they combine they are all correctly exposed? And how about when you develop them? Do you develop them like a normal 400? Thank you!! Photos were beautiful
Hi, It depends on the look I'm going for - for example if I want to just get the shape (silhouette) then I'll make sure the background is exposed normally or slightly over, and the person/silhouette is way under. Then I'll shoot normal to fill that silhouette. If I'm blending more then I'll slightly under expose both shots. One just gets different looks but I prefer using some contrasting light. I get my pics developed at a local lab so I just deal with what I get back.
My k1000 does the same thing after a double exposure, it only winds a quarter of a turn or sometimes half. So I’ll get overlapping from previous image. Does covering the lense with your hand and doing a blank exposure fix this?
Yes that's what I do - you lose a bit of film but at least get image without an overlap.
@@mattcgriffiths Thanks for your reply, ill try that.
@@mattcgriffiths Does putting the lense cap back on and taking a shot work the same ?
Dude this is such a good tutorial. So thorough and you predict so many problems that people might have. Thank you so much for this!
So glad you found it useful! Makes it worth the effort :)
Very informative. Thank you!
Baie dankie papie! Just what I was looking for. ❤
Awesome, thank you!
Great tutorial! Keep up the excellent work! You deserve much more subscribers.
Thanks! :)
Thank you For making this video. Stoked to see what I get
This tutorial is great! What a neat trick! I've just fixed (by someone competent 😂) my mom's Pentax ME-super and I was curious to try something fun with it, this surely is one of the first things I'll try, thanks a lot!
Great that you fixed up that camera - hope you have fun and get some interesting results!
Awesome video!! love the results at the end!
Thank you for the explanation. Some of the photos came out really amazing!!
Great description. But a bit awkward with this film camera. much easier with my eos 300 film camera (old and used for 5 bugs). Select multiple exposure for the picture in the menu (2-9) and have fun. only then does the camera continue to wind the film. But still really great video. Keep it up.
du sehr nocht genua ich denke das hättest du besser machen können denn der pinkt unten an der kamera dräht 😅💁🏻♂️
Excellent Tutorial! 🖤🖤🖤 the images 👏🏽
Great result! I would like to ask you a question, when you take the second time, do you have a written reference on the photos taken previously so that you know on which photo it will overlap or are random and the result do you leave it to chance? Do you take into account the two exposures by under-exposing each shot? Thank you if you want to answer
Hi Alessandro - I didn't do that but you definitely can. With this method I enjoy shooting blind and just seeing what magic happens! I don't under expose deliberately but I do try think about what bits of the film will be unexposed for the second exposure if that makes sense!
Some really cool results! Your last tute helped me heaps
Awesome! So glad to hear it... :)
Hi! I have a pentax mz-50 which windes the film automatically, can I shoot normally and then reload it and shoot again for double exposure?
Hi Laura, yes you can but you'll need to mark the film so you can reload it exactly the same (not off set) I actually just finished a tutorial on this and I'm uploading it next week!
@@mattcgriffiths thank you! I just watched it:)
Nice word and scene combination....
Ive try it n it work... But still need some redo work to make it just right
Did you get it right? I'm keen to see the result!
You look like a healthier and saner version of William Osman.
true 😂😂😂😂
That's cool. A friend just offered me a couple old Minolta lenses. I guess I know what I'm doing with them!
Did it work out?
Wow!
Interesting idea. A good attempt.
Nice build, and some truly beautiful images too!
Thanks, it's been a few weeks and it's still going strong!