YOOOO! DON'T SLEEP ON THE WIDE SHOTS TOO MAN!! I WAS WAITING (HOPING) THAT YOU GOT AT LEAST ONE WIDE SHOT AT PILLAR LEDGE AND WAITED FOR THAT LADY IN THE STROLLER TO MOVE TO GET THAT WIDE SHOT!! BOTH COULD'VE BEEN GREAT SCENES TO COMPLIMENT THE MODEL! TOO MANY "PHOTOGRAPHERS" SLEEP ON THEM WIDE SHOTS! NOT TELLING YOU WHAT TO DO - YOU DO WHAT YOU WANT! JUST GIVING YOU SOMETHING TO THINK OF ON YOUR NEXT SHOOT!!🤘🏾🤘🏾👊🏾
@@DCaldwellPhotography I used Kodak ISO 1600 color very grainy film. My friend wanted some hockey photos and that was the highest I could go back in the day. I was using a Minolta Maxxum 7000 and the Minolta f2.8 135mm. It did the job back then but you could only make small prints unless you really liked that noise.
Nice photos and the black and white one. What film was that? I just saw this even though it is a year old. Pretty model.
Kodak Gold 200 has been my film of choice for ages. It’s so reliable, and I’ve gotten some of my best shots using it with my Minolta X-700.
Love to hear it! It's such a reliable and beautiful film stock. Thanks for watching!
😍😍😍😍
🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾
DOPE SHOTS!💯💯💯
Thank you for watching!
Very good shots, I love Gold 200. I have an F5 also and I'm guessing you are using a 50mm 1.4 and spot metering.
Spot on! 😅😅 Thank you for watching!
Wow amazing! Love your videos while I try and understand exposure/how to expose. Do you meter for each shot you take and with the built-in meter?
Thank you so much!! && yes - at least with this specific shoot I used the internal light meter of my F5
Enjoyed
Thanks for watching!
YOOOO! DON'T SLEEP ON THE WIDE SHOTS TOO MAN!! I WAS WAITING (HOPING) THAT YOU GOT AT LEAST ONE WIDE SHOT AT PILLAR LEDGE AND WAITED FOR THAT LADY IN THE STROLLER TO MOVE TO GET THAT WIDE SHOT!! BOTH COULD'VE BEEN GREAT SCENES TO COMPLIMENT THE MODEL! TOO MANY "PHOTOGRAPHERS" SLEEP ON THEM WIDE SHOTS! NOT TELLING YOU WHAT TO DO - YOU DO WHAT YOU WANT! JUST GIVING YOU SOMETHING TO THINK OF ON YOUR NEXT SHOOT!!🤘🏾🤘🏾👊🏾
Appreciate the feedback!! ✊🏾✊🏾
Back in my day they had Kodak Gold ISO 100. LOL
I heard they had a Kodak Royal Gold film stock, too. Like 1000 iso. Would have loved to use that as well.
@@DCaldwellPhotography I used Kodak ISO 1600 color very grainy film. My friend wanted some hockey photos and that was the highest I could go back in the day. I was using a Minolta Maxxum 7000 and the Minolta f2.8 135mm. It did the job back then but you could only make small prints unless you really liked that noise.