Developing & Scanning Film In My Hotel Room
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 15 ต.ค. 2022
- Sunday Stroll Episode Seventeen
Sunday Strolls is a little photo series where we walk around our neighborhood and take photos with whatever film camera and whatever film stock we’re feel that Sunday. The only goal in mind is having a good time, and if the photos turn out, it’s an added bonus.
#film #35mmfilm #filmphotography #blackandwhite #leicam6 #ilfordhp5 #northcarolina
Instagramies:
Ramsey: / captainkiefer
Eli’s: / eliasjfalk
Film Camera’s used in this Episode: Leica m6
FIlm used in this episode: Ilford HP5
Digital Camera Set up used in this Episode: Sony FX3 & Rode wireless Go mics
Film Scanned with a Sony a1 - 90mm & Converted with Negative Lab Pro - Lightroom
Music Provided by Musicbed
Filmed in Gaston, NC
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I’m always terrified about getting up close on the property like you did with those cars but you get the shot and I don’t. I’m going to have to be a little more chancey
So cool to hear what's going through your head with each shot and learn what you're looking for. Thank you for working on this and sharing.
Yes! Go shoot again!
So good!
Really enjoyed watching the process of you develop/scan/edit your photos this time
Great video. Very entertaining. The photos are dope.
Awesome video. Good work, I like the flow. 👍🏻
Bro you look like a guy from the '70s so cool 😀
I've been going up to the California Central Coast lately to photograph, and the idea of developing in my hotel room had occured to me as well. But to see someone who's done it!
It was a struggle, but we got er done
Was this the eastern part of NC? I live in NC. I would not get up close to houses, but you are probably fine with a church. Good shots.
Thank you for sharing your process. It was gratifying to watch.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Great to see the process
Stoked you liked it!
man just found your vids. so many bangers. keep up the good work!
Thank you sir!!!
What was the final rinse you used (soapy stuff)? I don't think you are typically supposed to rinse in water after you use a final bath. At least thats the case with photo-flo. You didn't hurt anything, maybe just negated the usefulness of it. But, I've never used that stuff, so I could be wrong.
But none of that matters because you brought your whole lab setup to a hotel room. That’s some true dedication.
This. Although it feels counter-intuitive to leave it soapy … that _is_ how to do it.
It's called Ilford Simplicity Black and White Film Wetting Agent. It was part of this developing kit I used my first time developing my own black and white so I've just kept using it. Supposedly it helps the film dry with out any water marks.
@@ramseykiefer This product is functionally the same as Kodak Photoflo. The process shown in the video is erroneous. After fixing, you fully wash the film. That is nominally 20 minutes in running water at same temp as the development. After the wash, you give a quick soak in this wetting agent. You then hang the film to dry. You do not swipe it or use a squeegee. The wetting agent will prevent water spots from forming and will shed any excess water on the surface of the film. If there is a chance your water is "hard", mix the wetting agent with distilled water to prevent mineral deposits forming on the film as the water drys.
Awesome video man! Loved seeing the full process. New to digital Leica but very interested in the film process!
film or bust 😉
Getting an M6 tomorrow. Thanks for the inspo. 🤙🏼
WAFFLE HOUSE!!
👍👍👍
Who knew you can stroll in a car too - you live and you learn.
You can strolls any where any way 😉
nice man! was that the voigtlander 35mm Nokton classic f1.4 or the ultron f2?
Ive been rocking the Nokton Classic f1.4 ii and have been loving it.
@@ramseykiefer amazing. I have a few summiluxs but I also just bought the single coated version of the 35mm Nokton because I love the old school swirly glow it gets. you're getting killer results from it. keep up the good work!
Where can I buy the darkroom tent that you have?
I’m rocking the HARRISON FILM CHANGING TENT from camera essentials.
@@ramseykiefer Thank You very much!
So, this is where you finally get to justify spending $200 on your Lab-Box developing tank.