OK OK OK. These are, by far, some of the best night film photos I've ever seen. I really appreciate the deliberate techniques you used here and I can wholeheartedly appreciate this all. Again, cheers!
How did you determined the exposition time and the opening? Cause they are quite long, but the results are great. I'm currently shooting this film, but have not finished my roll yet. I shot in aperture priority. All my cameras have been serviced lately. Should i have proceeded differently?
I know some shutter release cables have a feature where it will hold the shutter like that. This is for super long exposures so you don't have to hold the cable the whole time. You can then release the shutter by pushing down the silver circle just below where you push the cable. To change the release to just push and release based off of when you hold it down, you can rotate the silver circle one way and it wont engage the locking mechanism.
Eventually I’m going try my hand at shooting night photography with this film stock again! I think you should try shooting Fujifilm Pro 400H my friend. My results with Pro 400H came out better than I expected. If you have a second or two, you should check it out! Love the results you came up with!
Great video mate, love the opening shot, quality idea. My favourite image was at 02:10, kinda reminds me of into the spiderverse.. earned yourself a sub! Looking forward to more of your work.
I wish he had gone through his process for setting up, measuring and computing exposure and then showing the image obtained. My reason is that an incident meter of the type he used is about as inappropriate for measuring light and computing exposure as you can get for night time photography. It can work very well, but it's a lot of extra work not required by a reflection meter. The highlight blowouts shown here do not suggest that care.
Thanks for the feedback man. I didn't want the video to be a tutorial, but rather, a insight to how these two film stocks can look when shot at night. As far as the tool I used to meter for each scene, I think the results would suggest it worked as intended considering I had metered for the shadows, yielding plenty of shadow detail. If I had metered in a way to where the highlights had not been blown out, you would come back with a much more crunched blacks and contrasty scene all in all. Also adding to the overblown highlights is the fact that I overexposed both film stocks by one stop. If I hadn't done that, I think the results would have better match your own expectations.
I just hit 500 subs! Thanks everyone that took time to hit that button. Next stop is 1000!!! 🙏🙏🙏
OK OK OK. These are, by far, some of the best night film photos I've ever seen. I really appreciate the deliberate techniques you used here and I can wholeheartedly appreciate this all. Again, cheers!
Thank you for the kind words. Really appreciate it!
My last night time session my shutter release cable broke on me too lol.... dope you was still able to finish the roll for this great video!
It was unfortunate but you live and learn!
Love this man glad to have found your channel ! Gunna try night photography
Thanks man. And yeah get out there and shoot!
How did you determined the exposition time and the opening? Cause they are quite long, but the results are great. I'm currently shooting this film, but have not finished my roll yet. I shot in aperture priority. All my cameras have been serviced lately. Should i have proceeded differently?
Really excellent shots! Shooting the same scene with each film would have been interesting. Keep at it - you have a real talent for composition!
Great video and shots! How did you meter for these shots? Hope you can explain your technique a bit. Greets Justin
Any tips on metering the scene? Do you use the meter reading as-is or make adjustments?
I metered for the darkest part of the scene to ensure shadows were properly exposed.
@@shibuyasoul thanks for the tip, I was also curious, your pictures look really good !
Any idea how you get your scans to have that grain is it something you do in post? Thanks
The grain is from the film stock themselves. These are lab scans on a Noritsu.
@@shibuyasoul great thank you very much
I know some shutter release cables have a feature where it will hold the shutter like that. This is for super long exposures so you don't have to hold the cable the whole time. You can then release the shutter by pushing down the silver circle just below where you push the cable. To change the release to just push and release based off of when you hold it down, you can rotate the silver circle one way and it wont engage the locking mechanism.
That Rollei looks so sweet at night! Great vid!
Awesome video dude! That shot at 3:07 was especially dope!
thanks man!
Nice shots ! Thank you from Belgium …
Killin it man!
Great video! Thanks for sharing
All these shots came out clean!
Fire man! Pure Fire! Got a new subscriber cause your awesome man
Appreciate the sub man. thanks!
Gotta love the intro bro 🤟
Thanks man!
Nice pics, man. Subscribed
Love it. Definitely prefer the cinestill for this set of photos. Also what light meter do you use?
@bloodmobile
Me too. Now I need to buy more smh. and I use the Sekonic L-358 light meter.
This is an excellent video, and you got excellent results.
Beautiful Photos
Shoutout To That Khrysis Production!
I can see you're a man with a great ear!
@@shibuyasoul Absolutely
Practically Grew Up On Jamla And Soul Council
Even Got To Be Khrysis' Wingman While I'm NC A Couple Years Back Haha
Eventually I’m going try my hand at shooting night photography with this film stock again! I think you should try shooting Fujifilm Pro 400H my friend.
My results with Pro 400H came out better than I expected. If you have a second or two, you should check it out! Love the results you came up with!
The intro is so creative and the images are amazing! I personable prefer the Cinestill, def buy one once I start night photography;)
Thanks so much!!
Thats the cool thing about film
No matter how long you've been shooting, theres always a challenging objective to try out !
Always learning something new every time 👍
photos are amazing!
Thank you sir!
Great video mate, love the opening shot, quality idea. My favourite image was at 02:10, kinda reminds me of into the spiderverse.. earned yourself a sub! Looking forward to more of your work.
Sorry 02:22 not 02:10!
@@MattJNeale Thanks for the kind words man!
I wish he had gone through his process for setting up, measuring and computing exposure and then showing the image obtained. My reason is that an incident meter of the type he used is about as inappropriate for measuring light and computing exposure as you can get for night time photography. It can work very well, but it's a lot of extra work not required by a reflection meter. The highlight blowouts shown here do not suggest that care.
Thanks for the feedback man. I didn't want the video to be a tutorial, but rather, a insight to how these two film stocks can look when shot at night. As far as the tool I used to meter for each scene, I think the results would suggest it worked as intended considering I had metered for the shadows, yielding plenty of shadow detail. If I had metered in a way to where the highlights had not been blown out, you would come back with a much more crunched blacks and contrasty scene all in all. Also adding to the overblown highlights is the fact that I overexposed both film stocks by one stop. If I hadn't done that, I think the results would have better match your own expectations.
@@shibuyasoul This is correct. If you had metered for the highlights, these pictures would've came out way different.
Subbed. Gotta start somewhere
Appreciate the sub man.
Print that one of Charlie's nice image outstanding reds.
Good idea!
@@shibuyasoul Might even be able to sell it to the business itself - I'd buy it if it were my building.
opening shot go stupid
ha thanks man.
@kamframes
@negativefeedback
yo you're in dc?? whats your ig, my guy?