@@cdahdude51 he is a practiced photographer. He is able to interpret the world around him in the artistic lens that he sees it through, and translate it into a photograph. Which should be the goal of anyone wishing to be a competent photographer.
These turned out great, really surprised at the lack of grain, which I expected to be copious at 3200 ISO. The only thing I'd do is correct out the purple colour cast in the shadows, but this film performed better than I expected at 3200.
Unbelievable! Outstanding POV. New sub. I will arm my Canon New F-1 with Cinestill 800T and apply the same logic to a shoot tonight. Also, I am impressed with how you leverage a Canon EOS 300 with a nifty 50 and expose and push process Portra 800 at 3200! Your batteries and the roll of film is worth more than the camera! Kudos.
Inspirational stuff. I wouldn't have guessed portra would look so nice pushed so far - although obviously it's hard to tell how grainy it is on a YT vid. Also very cool to see an entry level '90s SLR being used for something like this. I presume it isn't weather sealed? But it seemed to hold up well and the LCD screen looks really useful for this kind of shooting.
I was wondering if you are metering at 3200 iso, or if you are metering at box speed and just pushing 2 stops in development?? I’m still learning about pushing + pulling and am slightly confused about how I should meter. Thanks in advance and great video!!
Thank you! I meter at 3200 and expose for the shadows. I don't develop my own C41, just B&W, so I let them know to push process in development when dropping it off
You would meter at 3200 and also push 2 stops in development, if you shot at box speed and pushed in development your photos would be overexposed :) Good luck friend
Thanks! I was at 1.8 for most of the shots, with shutter speeds around 1/60-1/90, except in the car park around the middle and the trams at the end where I was able to stop down a bit
EOS 300V. I keep it tucked under my jacket when it's really pouring down and that seems to keep it safe enough, but yeah, it's a risk when shooting in the rain
Is the gear you are using weather sealed for conditions like this, I have a canon a2e sitting on my shelf and I was thinking of using it like this but I don't want to run the risk.
The Canon 300V has minimal weather sealing, but did okay in this. I reckon an A2E would be built a little better, but you could always small rain cover for it
Sorry noob question, if I have ,say 400 speed film and set the cameras iso to 800 and shoot the roll, can I just tell the developing shop that I purposely shot it at 800 and they will just know what to do?? Anyway great videos mate 👍
Totally agree. Since shooting this vid, I probably prefer shooting 400 and pushing 2 stops. 800 costs a lot more, even accounting for the lesser amount of pushing required, and I feel the colours are probably a little better from 400, even when pushed that far
@@baulyfcould u tell me, if I’d like to shoot in low light but I need faster shutter speed and I have 400 or 500 Shall I meter for 800 or 3200 or meter 200 Thank u
I really like the 300V, keeps it lightweight whilst still a little sturdier than cheaper models. I set the ISO to how far I'm going to push process it, then expose for the shadows as much as I can whilst keeping it handheld
@@bfxc In film, you are "stuck" at the iso the film comes in. Portra 800 is (predictably) at iso 800. If you wanted to shoot at 3200 (like in the video) you would set your meter to 3200 and then when processing the film you let it develop longer to compensate for pushing. At night there's no reasonable way to do handheld shots and also not have blurry photos, and that's the reason for pushing in this case
Hello there Baulyf, my name is Johnny and I'm a freelance logo designer, currently I'm looking for more works, would you love to have a logo for your channel's branding to help your audience recognise and remember you easier and longer? I would love to craft a photography themed monogram logo that inspired by your direction for you! Let me know if you interested to make it happen! :-)
Your photography is so good I can feel it coming inside of me
Bro what😂
@@cdahdude51 he is a practiced photographer.
He is able to interpret the world around him in the artistic lens that he sees it through, and translate it into a photograph. Which should be the goal of anyone wishing to be a competent photographer.
💀
I don’t think I’ve ever seen someone have such a successful roll of film shot. Incredible work and awesome video.
This video makes me want to shoot in the rain at night. The reflection of the lights is so good.
It's definitely one of my favourite conditions to shoot in
Absolutely phenomenal, I love the photos. Please keep these videos coming!!
Thanks :)
One of my happiest accidents was when I accidentally pushed Portra 160 to 400 on a road trip to California, the colors were soo rich and vibrant.
my dude, these photos are all bomb af, please keep up the good work!
Thanks! I've got quite a few rolls of film to get through, so there's still plenty more to shoot
These turned out great, really surprised at the lack of grain, which I expected to be copious at 3200 ISO. The only thing I'd do is correct out the purple colour cast in the shadows, but this film performed better than I expected at 3200.
Thanks! It goes alright despite being pushed that much, but yeah, the colour shifts start to get a bit extreme
I love the contrast and tones on these shots, I think they've turned out great - Well done!
Thanks!
Love the extra added drama of you loading the film in the camera. In a word, scintillating…
Unbelievable! Outstanding POV. New sub. I will arm my Canon New F-1 with Cinestill 800T and apply the same logic to a shoot tonight. Also, I am impressed with how you leverage a Canon EOS 300 with a nifty 50 and expose and push process Portra 800 at 3200! Your batteries and the roll of film is worth more than the camera! Kudos.
These are some truly incredible shots! Looks like I'll be picking up some Portra 800 real soon!
I took so much from this video and I'm not even in the middle of it. Phenomenal job with this roll!
Jesus that's just pure talent.
I loved how my roll of 800 at 3200 turned out . The colours just hit differently
Bought a roll of Kodak portra 800 today because of this. Awesome work, thanks for the idea! Greetings from Austria, the one without Kangoroos
Some of the best night shots I’ve seen. You’re awesome
Thank you :)
Big wow, phenomenal stuff
Inspirational stuff. I wouldn't have guessed portra would look so nice pushed so far - although obviously it's hard to tell how grainy it is on a YT vid. Also very cool to see an entry level '90s SLR being used for something like this. I presume it isn't weather sealed? But it seemed to hold up well and the LCD screen looks really useful for this kind of shooting.
nice to see the camera i bought being used here! cant wait to use mine
The 300V goes alright
Excellent video. Thanks for sharing.
Love this style of videos man, please keep making more
Loved this video and your shots, fantastic work!
hey there! another photographer from Melb, enjoying seeing your work here!
This was incredible to watch. Thank you!
Beautiful photos!
Dope content! Hypnotized watching this video
Lovely work mate. I’ve only shot P800 at 800 or lower, and never really liked it. I’ll try this!
love the compositions bro! pushing does take out shadow detail in some of your shots. but i definitely love the atmosphere of the shoot.
I was wondering if you are metering at 3200 iso, or if you are metering at box speed and just pushing 2 stops in development?? I’m still learning about pushing + pulling and am slightly confused about how I should meter. Thanks in advance and great video!!
Thank you! I meter at 3200 and expose for the shadows. I don't develop my own C41, just B&W, so I let them know to push process in development when dropping it off
You would meter at 3200 and also push 2 stops in development, if you shot at box speed and pushed in development your photos would be overexposed :) Good luck friend
@@aarontimm "if you shot at box speed and pushed in development your photos would be overexposed" no they would be overdevelopped ;)
that is the first time ive seen someone use a phone as a mirror, might have to do that on a future roll of film
love the idea using the phone as a mirror! were these all shot at 1.8 and what kind of shutterspeeds were you getting at that?
Thanks! I was at 1.8 for most of the shots, with shutter speeds around 1/60-1/90, except in the car park around the middle and the trams at the end where I was able to stop down a bit
Which camera is this? Were you not worried at all about it getting wet?
EOS 300V. I keep it tucked under my jacket when it's really pouring down and that seems to keep it safe enough, but yeah, it's a risk when shooting in the rain
oh man, the golden square carpark is a great location, but watch out! last time I was there taking photos on the roof, security kicked me out
Hahaha, yeah, happens all the time in car parks
whoa.... bruh is walking down alleys fearlessly lmao and that weird door that was left ajar?? love the video and the photos!
Haha, I was looking for a bar that used to be down there, so I was expecting it to be a lot brighter
Impressive really!
Using your phone to create reflections is actually insane.
Great work! my friend!
Thank you!
Nice vid and shots man. Wondering about your GoPro set up. Chest mount?
Head mount for handheld vids like this one. When I'm doing more tripod shots, I go for a chest mount
Wow 🤩
Is the gear you are using weather sealed for conditions like this, I have a canon a2e sitting on my shelf and I was thinking of using it like this but I don't want to run the risk.
The Canon 300V has minimal weather sealing, but did okay in this. I reckon an A2E would be built a little better, but you could always small rain cover for it
This is some awesome stuff. What kinda camera is it?
Thanks! It's a Canon 300V
Sorry noob question, if I have ,say 400 speed film and set the cameras iso to 800 and shoot the roll, can I just tell the developing shop that I purposely shot it at 800 and they will just know what to do??
Anyway great videos mate 👍
Yeah, they should to (and charge you a bit extra for it too)
Do you think Cinestil 800 can be pushed to the same extent?
Yes! I did that in this vid th-cam.com/video/3-zT0X6_YnI/w-d-xo.html
Colors shift a bit much for me.
I'd push it to 1600 instead, would be a bit trickier but would yield better results.
Not to say your results aren't good. Far from that.
Totally agree. Since shooting this vid, I probably prefer shooting 400 and pushing 2 stops. 800 costs a lot more, even accounting for the lesser amount of pushing required, and I feel the colours are probably a little better from 400, even when pushed that far
Very nice images. Is there much grain?
There's a bit, but I'd say it tracks favourably to some other 800 ISO films
@@baulyf very good to know , thanks!
What camera are you using? Is that a Kiss 5?
It is!
@@baulyf I thought it had to be. That strange curved handgrip is probably unique to that camera. You like the camera by the looks of it.
Hey… nice video… I wanna ask you. Your settings on your camera are set up for 3200 or 800 and then push it in post prices… thank u
I'm metering at 3200 when shooting and pushing 2 stops when developing the film
@@baulyfmuch appreciate it….. thank u 🙏
@@baulyfcould u tell me, if I’d like to shoot in low light but I need faster shutter speed and I have 400 or 500
Shall I meter for 800 or 3200 or meter 200
Thank u
What would be the proper shutter speed since it’s being pushed +2 stops ?
I was using 1/60 - 1/90 at f1.8 on this session
What light meter are you using?
The Canon 300V I'm using has one in body
What's your method of deciding which ISO to set on the camera? I have the same camera btw
I really like the 300V, keeps it lightweight whilst still a little sturdier than cheaper models. I set the ISO to how far I'm going to push process it, then expose for the shadows as much as I can whilst keeping it handheld
@@baulyf Thanks. But what are the reasons you push, and also expose? Sorry for the questions but I'm a noobie at this.
@@bfxc For this vid, I was pushing the film to see if I could shoot handheld in low light and avoid using a tripod
@@bfxc In film, you are "stuck" at the iso the film comes in. Portra 800 is (predictably) at iso 800. If you wanted to shoot at 3200 (like in the video) you would set your meter to 3200 and then when processing the film you let it develop longer to compensate for pushing. At night there's no reasonable way to do handheld shots and also not have blurry photos, and that's the reason for pushing in this case
@@aarontimm Generally speaking at daytime, you set the ISO meter equal to the film ISO, then?
what shutter speed did you use? like roughly
Around 1/60 to 1/90 at f1.8 for most of the night. Some of the shots in the car park and at the end I was able to stop down a bit
@@baulyf Cool! And what mode of the camera did you mostly use? I bought the same one :D
Aperture priority?
@@marino4691 All manual here. I wanted to keep my shutter speeds around 1/60, so aperture priority might drop them below this
internet light meter ?
EOS 300V has one in-body
Hows the grain at 3200?
Honestly, really good, I was surprised at how well it turned out. Stays sharp and retains plenty of shadow detail
这个相机应该挂在脖子上,如果在头上会非常的晃。
Hello there Baulyf, my name is Johnny and I'm a freelance logo designer, currently I'm looking for more works, would you love to have a logo for your channel's branding to help your audience recognise and remember you easier and longer? I would love to craft a photography themed monogram logo that inspired by your direction for you! Let me know if you interested to make it happen! :-)
Do u feel like u should just shoot digital from just scanning ur film