35mm

35mm photos

35mm Photos, Lincoln City (Oregon), Summer 2021

35mm film photos. Montana, July 2021.

35mm film photos. Manzanita, Oregon. July 2021.

35mm photos, Dec. 2020 - May 2021

35mm (full-frame) photos from December 2020 - May 2021. Shot on several different cameras. AristaEDU 400 and Tri-X 400 film, developed and scanned by me.

Half-frame 35mm photos, Dec 2020 - May 2021

35mm half-frame photos from November 2020

I got a working half-frame camera in November so the bad news for you, dear reader, is that I can now shoot twice as many photos on a roll and will be taking even more photos than I have been. I got an Olympus Pen FT, and it’s been really nice to shoot with in general.

By the way, other than being able to take twice as many photos, the draw of the half-frame camera for me is that, since each image is smaller on the roll of film, the grain is much more pronounced in each image. In fact, it’s twice as large as it would appear in a normal full-frame 35mm image.

I love the gritty look of these images that comes as a result of this larger grain, and I love how the process of reflected light being recorded onto a film strip can distort reality. It’s more a process of mark-making than of capturing real objects and scenes. Film photography in general has this appeal for me, and black-and-white film is already great at abstracting reality. But the smaller images with larger grain that the half-frame camera produces add yet another layer of distortion between the real thing and how it’s expressed in the final image. These images feel even more dreamlike to me, they have the quality of a moment half-remembered. And rather than simply being a still moment in time, these images make it look as though the world itself held still and posed.

35mm photos from November 2020

35mm photos from October 2020

Still taking lots of photos, still developing b&w film myself. Here are some more of them, in no particular order. 35mm on various cameras.

Photos, 35mm, Fall 2020

I’ve recently learned to develop black and white film, so I’ve been shooting a lot of 35mm photos and developing/scanning/processing the rolls myself in my studio. I’ve also been practicing pushing the film to higher ISOs to make the images really grainy and contrasty and I’ve been happy with the results. Here are a few recent shots. These were shot on a Ricoh AF-40 and a Canon P with a 50mm lens, using various B&W films.

Photos, May 2020

35mm photos shot with Kodak Colorplus 200 film on an Olympus OM-2S camera. May 2020 in Portland.

Photos, April-May 2020

More photos shot on my half-frame film camera, from late April and early May 2020.

The control over the focus and aperture is pretty limited with this camera, so I still don’t fully know what to expect when I shoot with it. Lots of pics were too out-of-focus or over-exposed, but I like how many of them turned out. The out-of-focus and blown-out quality of the pics from this camera is really interesting. I love how this quality makes the pictures look like they’re from another time, or a dream. It calls to mind a different world when I look at them, and I like taking pics of stuff just to see how it’ll look filtered through this camera. It’s making me notice things I hadn’t before, even when I’m not taking any pictures.