Man, no need to post more if that means lowering the quality of your videos. I really enjoy them because they are good, not because they are many. Please don't be like all those phototubers who turned their channels into marketing devices. Keep doing what you're doing
2nd! Stumbled across your videos and was blown away with the quality and style, love it! Even more so when compared to the gear-centric content of other channels everyone else produces. Keep it up, really enjoy them!
Completely. I can't stand all those gear-centric, comparometer, clickbait, fix-it-in-Photoshop channels which aren't about photography at all. Here it's all killer, no filler.
Absolutely best fine art photography channel I've seen so far and I really doubt if there is any better out there. The way you work in focus and the pictures are amazing. And btw. I'm the same when it comes to picking one and "the best" way of editing photos. I literaly do the same: - this one it's okay 5 minutes later: - hm, warmer tones looks better Cheers and thanks for the videos :)
Outstanding video, as are all your videos…excellent combination of artistic and technical… AND, thanks for explaining the source for the metal binders…will not give up looking!!! 😊
Hey Nick! I just want to say how refreshing it is to see you on TH-cam, finally someone with a respect for craft, and a strive to perfection and is actually a great photographer!! I will add two things that will help your color balance struggles. Firstly, get a color meter - You can get a Minolta Color Meter II for about $200. A few tests and you can determine what is the correct balance for the film of your choice. Then each time you scan film, you can just set levels to make the film edge black, and you'll have perfect color each time :)
Ethan Ingram thank you very much! I'm interested about the color meter. I've used one before and I know it's very useful for setting white balance on a digital camera, but I can't picture how that would translate to getting a better color balance on a film scan. Do you know of any articles or videos that explain this further?
This is going to sound archaic, and a bit long form, but hear me through. What you want to do, is create a color and exposure standard for each film you are using. So you setup a test of a grey card (or an xrite passport) in open shade, use the color meter to determine that the shade is daylight kelvin, or if you need to add a certain CC filter to match. Take a series of text exposures bracketed in half stops. Have it developed normally. Scan all shots in, find the one that gives the appropriate exposure value on the grey card for that scanner. That is your appropriate film EI for scanning. You should then be able to set the film border as maximum black and have the color and exposure dead on in one shot. Its similar to setting up a color filter pack for traditional printing. You need to establish a baseline for the film that creates neutral color. Once you get that setup, each time you scan a film, you'll be dead on, (providing you're cc filtering your images in camera - again, color meter gets handy there) and will just need to adjust the contrast a bit. P.S. I'm in Los Angeles myself, and would love to go shooting with you sometime!
Accept it, this are great photos, don't let ego to interfere. Your ego is saying it is way too simple, but it is not. Just follow your heart :) And thanks for your videos, makes me wanna do photography watching your enthusiasm for it.
Thanks for the compliment on my videos! The 90mm SW has an image circle of 154mm only at the widest aperture, which I never really use. The image circle is 235mm at f/16. Sources: galerie-photo.com/manuels/nikkor-lenses-for-large-format%20cameras.pdf and www.largeformatphotography.info/lenses/LF4x5in.html
Glad to have you back. I always look forward to your videos. And for people like me who are fascinated by film but are so crippled photographically to take on the daunting task of shooting film, it helps A LOT when you throw in brief tutorials on why you’re using each each equipment. Would also love if you threw in tips on metering from time to time. Truly appreciate the effort you put into these videos. Keep up the good work!
These videos are amazing. I shoot mostly digital now, primarily because of time, digital allows me to shoot more, but your videos are awesome lessons in the fundamentals that make every photograph good. Thank you!
Your on location videos/reviews are amazing and some of the very best on youtube. Please keep on doing that and be inspired!!! I appreciate all the technicalities, montages, music and humor! Thanks a ton.
Nick, if that double exposure were mine, I'd probably print and frame it. I love it. People will be forever asking you how you did it. So you can reply: "One just has to be at the right place the right place at the right time the right time." ♡
Porta 400 shots look really cool and that last shot with the diagonal shadows, top draw. As always I will be looking forward to your next video. Long live film
Great pictures! I do not shoot film very often, but in the last couple of month, Porta 160 became my favorite color film. Keep on doing this great work!
Really enjoying these videos Nick. So nice to see the process and thoughts behind your work, and enthusing me to pick up my film camera and get out in the landscape!
Try the Color Checker Passport - at each site include it in one of the picks. Also you can use their software to make a profile of each film like they do to profile each camera.
the greatest video about films on TH-cam. love your content especially when you're talking about the adjustment of the negs... that's the forever pain on every film shooter. looking forward to more videos! and subscribed!
Hi Nick, thanks for the video... I shot a LOT of Velvia, 35 & 6x7, and would often shoot, in the desert, or places like Hawaii, with 1/2-2/3 stop overexposure, and the same amount of 'pull' processing, which allowed me to shoot a 20-step Kodak card with gradation at every step...
Just stumbled on your video series while looking for reviews on the RB67, good stuff! You put together a technically sound video while still providing a bit of humor and giving us a look at the finished images-even the ones you made mistakes on! Nice to see, your approach is refreshing.
Really love your work and videos, very inspiring! That double exposure doesn't look all bad actually as the one building falls almost perfectly between the other two. Also, gives it a very ghost town feel. Looking forward to more videos, esp about film photography!
Great videos. Just best to do what you can do. I would rather see one video a month, rather than have a few a month and not see you for a long time after. Whatever you do, you do it well and your work is appreciated.
Nick and great and informative video. I shoot hardly any slide film but with your generous sharing of knowledge I will put some velvia 50 in my 6x17 back
Awesome yet again! Thanks for the heads up re the use of the SB lenses with the Tilt/Shift adapter. Since I don't shoot so much architecture, I might give it a miss. I don't have the 75mm sb lens either....btw, I much preferred the Portra for nearly everything you shot. Strong light and Velvia is too much I feel, but great in soft light. So nice to have a channel that devotes time to quality film work and I like the behind the scenes aspect. Good job.
Great with some perspective on your trip. Thank you. Keep up the great work. Your style and personality coupled with your insights makes this one of the best photography vlogs out there. More people should know about it.
So good Nick and good to know you're human like the rest of us. TBH, I'd be totally experimenting and guessing on multiple filter exposures. That would be a good video just by itself. Hope you can keep these coming Nick.
Love the 6x17 format! One of these days I'm going to get a Fuju GX617 again and some Velvia and take enjoy slowing down to compose and shoot. Nice compositions!
13:07 you can't decide which one is best. To my eye the Portra one is a tad bit more realistically coloured. The building is a bit more yellow/creamy than white, which is more realistic in the setting sun to me. Also the sky itself is more blue on Portra, on Velvia it goes a bit too purpule for my taste.
I recently found your page. Ive been enjoying all your videos! Great shooting and commentary/narration. Inspired me to slow down and get back to some film shooting again! Thanks for the awesome vids!
Another great video. As for the accidental double exposure first looks like an interesting image and second nice to see that even professionals make mistakes too. Thank you for sharing your mistake.
Love these videos Nick can't believe I haven't seen you on here before now excellent series of vids and great honest content with humour . Right up my street . Shout out from Ireland .
For what its worth, I prefer the building with no roof at 13' in Portra. I just think the softer look really suits it. Great video Nick, keep them coming. :-)
SOLID !!!!!! love your process and sharing while thinking. Concise and articulate. Just getting ready to get back into 4x5 Photography. Too bad I waiting so long, you cannot find type55 any more and if you do, its PRICEY> Learned a bunch watching you thou. Thanks.
Great video! I especially liked the part about the dynamic range of the film. I would be very interested in a video about your metering technique. Awesome photos, I look forward to more videos. I have also been following on Instagram. Thanks again.
Stumbled on your channel yesterday. Awesome stuff my dude. For me the portra is a lot nicer, but I’m a sucker for that muted contrast look. Look forward to your future stuff!
Fair play man, great content. My thoughts (I know, okay who cares) but I think I'd go with the Portra pano shot over the Velvia of the building as it totally suits this image, on old faded and aged scene. Delighted I came across your Channel and that button is pressed. Cheers Mark Griffin Photo. Ps think I'll dig out my "blad"again. 😏
Top video. I'm learning lots of useful tips from your vids and I'm only shooting digital. Have recently dug out my Canon 35mm loaded with B&W FP4 so I reckon I'll be busy. Plus I have an Epson V370 and I also need to archive decades of 35mm Help!!! 😬. Smiled at the double exposure error tho. I done stupid as well, WAAY back in time, but that's another story for later..👍
Ever thought about metering on the screen (when using the large camera)? This way you would have to do the correction for the screen once (to measure the light that actually goes to the film afterwards) and could measure with the center filter on the lens. I've never done that before, but I read about it. Just a thought.
Austin Mattison thanks man! And funny you should say that because I'm hoping to eventually make a big print of that exact image. And make a video of the process, of course.
I enjoyed this video a lot. Thank you. The shoots came out great. I hope you can decide between the two films more easily in the future :). Must be hard to settle on only one type. Good work and video as per usual.
The Portra looks nice, the colour is more neutral. Portra was designed principally for flesh tones, it would be nice to see some examples that include people for comparison. Good video.
Man, no need to post more if that means lowering the quality of your videos. I really enjoy them because they are good, not because they are many.
Please don't be like all those phototubers who turned their channels into marketing devices.
Keep doing what you're doing
That's exactly what I need to hear. That's what my gut tells me, but it's great to hear from a viewer, too.
2nd! Stumbled across your videos and was blown away with the quality and style, love it! Even more so when compared to the gear-centric content of other channels everyone else produces. Keep it up, really enjoy them!
Completely. I can't stand all those gear-centric, comparometer, clickbait, fix-it-in-Photoshop channels which aren't about photography at all. Here it's all killer, no filler.
@@nickcarverphoto son of a beast you are, greetins from spain!
Please do a video on correct metering on film!
I got so much love for you for going out with two films, creating your own dilemma in post :))) so good and funny. 🤣
I find myself rewatching your videos! Love your work!
Absolutely best fine art photography channel I've seen so far and I really doubt if there is any better out there. The way you work in focus and the pictures are amazing. And btw. I'm the same when it comes to picking one and "the best" way of editing photos. I literaly do the same:
- this one it's okay
5 minutes later:
- hm, warmer tones looks better
Cheers and thanks for the videos :)
Thank you very much! There are some great channels out there, so that's saying a lot.
Re-watching this as you are a great teacher.
Aw what.. You had me so hooked on the binder... Sad...
Outstanding video, as are all your videos…excellent combination of artistic and technical…
AND, thanks for explaining the source for the metal binders…will not give up looking!!! 😊
One of the best velvia portra comparisons I have seen. Mainly because the pictures are relevant to you and not stupid test pictures. Thanks!
I live on Rt.66, so I have a lot of local'66 photos. I do like the two videos you've done on '66 in Ca. Mine are in NM. Fun to watch the videos.
Hey Nick! I just want to say how refreshing it is to see you on TH-cam, finally someone with a respect for craft, and a strive to perfection and is actually a great photographer!! I will add two things that will help your color balance struggles. Firstly, get a color meter - You can get a Minolta Color Meter II for about $200. A few tests and you can determine what is the correct balance for the film of your choice. Then each time you scan film, you can just set levels to make the film edge black, and you'll have perfect color each time :)
Ethan Ingram thank you very much! I'm interested about the color meter. I've used one before and I know it's very useful for setting white balance on a digital camera, but I can't picture how that would translate to getting a better color balance on a film scan. Do you know of any articles or videos that explain this further?
This is going to sound archaic, and a bit long form, but hear me through. What you want to do, is create a color and exposure standard for each film you are using. So you setup a test of a grey card (or an xrite passport) in open shade, use the color meter to determine that the shade is daylight kelvin, or if you need to add a certain CC filter to match.
Take a series of text exposures bracketed in half stops.
Have it developed normally.
Scan all shots in, find the one that gives the appropriate exposure value on the grey card for that scanner. That is your appropriate film EI for scanning. You should then be able to set the film border as maximum black and have the color and exposure dead on in one shot.
Its similar to setting up a color filter pack for traditional printing. You need to establish a baseline for the film that creates neutral color.
Once you get that setup, each time you scan a film, you'll be dead on, (providing you're cc filtering your images in camera - again, color meter gets handy there) and will just need to adjust the contrast a bit.
P.S. I'm in Los Angeles myself, and would love to go shooting with you sometime!
Accept it, this are great photos, don't let ego to interfere. Your ego is saying it is way too simple, but it is not. Just follow your heart :) And thanks for your videos, makes me wanna do photography watching your enthusiasm for it.
Nick I’m really addicted to your videos.
Awesome results and thanks for sharing your though process on taking the shots!!
your videos are excellent, clear, precise, witty and frank.
Love your videos, Nick. Motivated me to jump on a 617 after contemplating for many years.
Thanks for the compliment on my videos! The 90mm SW has an image circle of 154mm only at the widest aperture, which I never really use. The image circle is 235mm at f/16. Sources: galerie-photo.com/manuels/nikkor-lenses-for-large-format%20cameras.pdf and www.largeformatphotography.info/lenses/LF4x5in.html
"There's too many options man!" I feel you brother... Glad you're back to making more videos regularly, really enjoy them. Keep up the good work.
Glad to have you back. I always look forward to your videos. And for people like me who are fascinated by film but are so crippled photographically to take on the daunting task of shooting film, it helps A LOT when you throw in brief tutorials on why you’re using each each equipment. Would also love if you threw in tips on metering from time to time. Truly appreciate the effort you put into these videos. Keep up the good work!
Loved this and the Route 66 video. Just awesome images, love the location, love the subject matter, love the dedication to your craft.
Thank you very much!
"One percent to the left - one percent to the right"
And I thought I'm the only one who's got these problems. :)
Great.
These videos are amazing. I shoot mostly digital now, primarily because of time, digital allows me to shoot more, but your videos are awesome lessons in the fundamentals that make every photograph good. Thank you!
Your on location videos/reviews are amazing and some of the very best on youtube. Please keep on doing that and be inspired!!! I appreciate all the technicalities, montages, music and humor! Thanks a ton.
Nick, if that double exposure were mine, I'd probably print and frame it. I love it.
People will be forever asking you how you did it. So you can reply: "One just has to be at the right place the right place at the right time the right time." ♡
Yes! Another cool video, and superb shots also! Cant wait for the next one.
You Sir, are one heck of a photographer. Best damn photographer this side of Texas.
Porta 400 shots look really cool and that last shot with the diagonal shadows, top draw. As always I will be looking forward to your next video. Long live film
your indecisiveness is too relatable. thanks for yet another informative video!
Great pictures! I do not shoot film very often, but in the last couple of month, Porta 160 became my favorite color film.
Keep on doing this great work!
One of the few videos I watched in normal speed ... Really interesting, thank you!
Your knowledge is inspiring and I love your free-spirited style of delivery. Really loved this vid and am already looking forward to the next one!
Really enjoying these videos Nick. So nice to see the process and thoughts behind your work, and enthusing me to pick up my film camera and get out in the landscape!
Please do do more photo trip vids. Awesome! I watch a lot of these photo channels, and yours is by far the best, imo.
Nick your videos are awesome really well done. I have been a photographer for many years and you are wise beyond your years and you do beautiful work.
Thanks for the lesson. Fun and informative. Hope to see more in the future
I really love the way you present your video, very unique style, plus the content is always great too
Amazing channel Nick. Love your images, your perspective and your sense of humour. More, more, more....please 😁
Lovely video... thanks for sharing your process... interesting panorama style compositions...
Try the Color Checker Passport - at each site include it in one of the picks. Also you can use their software to make a profile of each film like they do to profile each camera.
the greatest video about films on TH-cam. love your content especially when you're talking about the adjustment of the negs... that's the forever pain on every film shooter. looking forward to more videos! and subscribed!
Thanks Nick great video again, superb work. Glad I'm not the only one with image tweaking issues!
Absolutely love the content of your videos. Love your delivery in front of the camera too 👍🏽👍🏽👍🏽👍🏽
Hi Nick, thanks for the video... I shot a LOT of Velvia, 35 & 6x7, and would often shoot, in the desert, or places like Hawaii, with 1/2-2/3 stop overexposure, and the same amount of 'pull' processing, which allowed me to shoot a 20-step Kodak card with gradation at every step...
Just stumbled on your video series while looking for reviews on the RB67, good stuff! You put together a technically sound video while still providing a bit of humor and giving us a look at the finished images-even the ones you made mistakes on! Nice to see, your approach is refreshing.
Really love your work and videos, very inspiring! That double exposure doesn't look all bad actually as the one building falls almost perfectly between the other two. Also, gives it a very ghost town feel. Looking forward to more videos, esp about film photography!
Just stumbled onto this channel, and so glad I did. Fantastic work, both the photos and the video output!
Super interesting your comparaison and about the dynamic range, it more understanding to me now.
Great videos. Just best to do what you can do. I would rather see one video a month, rather than have a few a month and not see you for a long time after. Whatever you do, you do it well and your work is appreciated.
Love them all! But I really love the "mistake" at the end with the double exposure!
Every Nick`s video is just amazing work and great research. Priceless channel.
You videos are very informative and entertaining, you photos are perfect!
great video Nick. love how you take the time to explain the whole process
Nick and great and informative video. I shoot hardly any slide film but with your generous sharing of knowledge I will put some velvia 50 in my 6x17 back
I think that double exposed was also great. it had somewhat mythic feel to it with all the colors in the palette.
I always learn something new with your videos! Thank you!
This video was great! I appreciate the lesson on dynamic range. Great work!
Great video very insightful!!
Awesome yet again! Thanks for the heads up re the use of the SB lenses with the Tilt/Shift adapter. Since I don't shoot so much architecture, I might give it a miss. I don't have the 75mm sb lens either....btw, I much preferred the Portra for nearly everything you shot. Strong light and Velvia is too much I feel, but great in soft light. So nice to have a channel that devotes time to quality film work and I like the behind the scenes aspect. Good job.
Joe Rainbow thank you very much!
Great with some perspective on your trip. Thank you. Keep up the great work. Your style and personality coupled with your insights makes this one of the best photography vlogs out there. More people should know about it.
incredible videos, cheers! I follow you from yesterday, but I have already seen many of your videos and I really like the format.
So good Nick and good to know you're human like the rest of us. TBH, I'd be totally experimenting and guessing on multiple filter exposures. That would be a good video just by itself. Hope you can keep these coming Nick.
You had me at Rz67, and Millennial graphite. Well done!
On Location videos with the follow ups are great, would love to see more.
Wonderful video. Really enjoy them and your work is just beautiful. Keep em coming.
Love the 6x17 format! One of these days I'm going to get a Fuju GX617 again and some Velvia and take enjoy slowing down to compose and shoot. Nice compositions!
13:07 you can't decide which one is best. To my eye the Portra one is a tad bit more realistically coloured. The building is a bit more yellow/creamy than white, which is more realistic in the setting sun to me. Also the sky itself is more blue on Portra, on Velvia it goes a bit too purpule for my taste.
I recently found your page. Ive been enjoying all your videos! Great shooting and commentary/narration. Inspired me to slow down and get back to some film shooting again! Thanks for the awesome vids!
Awesome photographs and thank you for sharing the expierence.
Really cool shots!
Love your videos! Please keep them coming!
Excellent teaching Nick. Thanks
Another great video. As for the accidental double exposure first looks like an interesting image and second nice to see that even professionals make mistakes too. Thank you for sharing your mistake.
great explanation about the dynamic range of slide vs negative film and i have to say i really like the double exposed image i think it come out great
Love these videos Nick can't believe I haven't seen you on here before now excellent series of vids and great honest content with humour . Right up my street . Shout out from Ireland .
For what its worth, I prefer the building with no roof at 13' in Portra. I just think the softer look really suits it. Great video Nick, keep them coming. :-)
Yeah I'm leaning towards that one too. Thank you!
Me too I think
POSITIVE FEEDBACK! Love your new videos keep it up bud!
Dude your channel is awesome! So glad I found it. Keep up the great work, can't wait to see the next video. Merry Christmas !
SOLID !!!!!! love your process and sharing while thinking. Concise and articulate. Just getting ready to get back into 4x5 Photography. Too bad I waiting so long, you cannot find type55 any more and if you do, its PRICEY> Learned a bunch watching you thou. Thanks.
Great video! I especially liked the part about the dynamic range of the film. I would be very interested in a video about your metering technique. Awesome photos, I look forward to more videos. I have also been following on Instagram. Thanks again.
Stumbled on your channel yesterday. Awesome stuff my dude. For me the portra is a lot nicer, but I’m a sucker for that muted contrast look. Look forward to your future stuff!
Great video! Loved the original route 66 as well! Keep it up!
Fair play man, great content. My thoughts (I know, okay who cares) but I think I'd go with the Portra pano shot over the Velvia of the building as it totally suits this image, on old faded and aged scene. Delighted I came across your Channel and that button is pressed. Cheers Mark Griffin Photo. Ps think I'll dig out my "blad"again. 😏
Lol, same boat as you when I bring my negative scans to LR, the worst...So now I've been using ColorPerfect to get a good base color to start.
Top video. I'm learning lots of useful tips from your vids and I'm only shooting digital. Have recently dug out my Canon 35mm loaded with B&W FP4 so I reckon I'll be busy. Plus I have an Epson V370 and I also need to archive decades of 35mm Help!!! 😬. Smiled at the double exposure error tho. I done stupid as well, WAAY back in time, but that's another story for later..👍
Great shooting once again :)
Must try some Portra
Stocked to see this pop up!
Ever thought about metering on the screen (when using the large camera)? This way you would have to do the correction for the screen once (to measure the light that actually goes to the film afterwards) and could measure with the center filter on the lens. I've never done that before, but I read about it. Just a thought.
Enjoyed your video. Reminded me of my brother Chet that use to do a lot of large format work. In fact he developed a panoramic camera called the v pan
Thanks for the great video. I hope your schedule permits more videos, too!
WTB Welding Building print on Portra. Great follow-up!
Austin Mattison thanks man! And funny you should say that because I'm hoping to eventually make a big print of that exact image. And make a video of the process, of course.
Great videos, love your photos!
WoW mindblowing!! Your job is awesome!
Nice work. Love the video!
Completely relate-able! "Addicted to variety" is totally me too. Now going to eBay to find discontinued film to shoot before I can't get it anymore...
Man! Ur a legend! Your set up looks soo OCD. In a very good way. Gave me the motivation to organise ! Cheers
great video, solid information
Excellent content, love your work. Keep it up mate!
I enjoyed this video a lot. Thank you. The shoots came out great. I hope you can decide between the two films more easily in the future :). Must be hard to settle on only one type. Good work and video as per usual.
Great video mate
The Portra looks nice, the colour is more neutral. Portra was designed principally for flesh tones, it would be nice to see some examples that include people for comparison. Good video.
I neeed more of these on location shooots!
Great video