- Видео 31
- Просмотров 97 072
Adrian Heffernan
Добавлен 30 июн 2012
Hi, I am a Bray, Co Wicklow based Irish photographer, Time-lapser ??? and Videographer, I love doing this I hope you enjoy some of what I've done , Feel free to comment and like or just get in touch.
Видео
Butterfly lighting
Просмотров 1454 года назад
In this short video, I show you a 5 light set up with butterfly lighting for the key light, We also look at practical lights, edge light and background light.
Restoring Kodachrome slides
Просмотров 18 тыс.4 года назад
After finding my father's old slide/transparencies underneath the stairs, I take a look at how to restore old Kodachrome slides and at this vintage film stock and its beautiful tonal range. I use a negative digitizer by Silver crest to scan the images.
Autumn is coming
Просмотров 705 лет назад
A short literal and metaphorical ramble in the woods, where I talk about a different approach to Autumn and landscape photography and how to get those creative ideas flowing.
Photography and the manipulative impulse
Просмотров 895 лет назад
A short video/rant where I take a look at the manipulative impulse in photography. Why do we feel the need to manipulate our images, when did it all start and is there a downside to altering what the camera sees?
6 Cuts & Transitions every video maker should know.
Просмотров 2175 лет назад
In this video, I take a Fun look at 6 cuts and transitions which can help breath life into your video projects. From the Hard cut to L and J cuts, whip pans and lens covers. These are a great way to add some dynamic energy to any video
Landscape Photography - Getting Started
Просмотров 1256 лет назад
Join me on this hike through some of Irelands beauty as I talk about landscape photography, From composition to filters and a whole lot more.
Portrait lighting - Rembrandt lighting
Просмотров 1,5 тыс.7 лет назад
A look at Rembrandt lighting with fill light, Rim Light and a practical light
85mm Portraits ? - 7 Photo Cliches to avoid
Просмотров 2457 лет назад
Make your photography stand out from the crowd by avoiding these 7 photo cliches
Pentax 50mm f1.7 - Review
Просмотров 49 тыс.7 лет назад
I compare a super cheap thrift store vintage Pentax 50mm f1.7 to Canon 50mm STM f1.8, Find out what is great about vintage glass and how easy it is to adapt it to your modern camera.
Magpie Asks
Просмотров 337 лет назад
Magpie Magazine asks's women in Dublin what they think about feminism.
Aperture
Просмотров 437 лет назад
A short video showing shallow depth of field with a f1.8 lens on a canon 7d Music www.bensound.com Tenderness
Chasing Sunset - A photographers hike.
Просмотров 777 лет назад
Join me as I chase the sunset in search of a landscape photograph. Music Acoustic Breeze - www.bensound.com
The exposure triangle - A beginners guide.
Просмотров 3 тыс.7 лет назад
A very simple look at exposure, ISO, Aperture and shutter with some examples to show the effects your choices have on an image.
XCSource Cheap camera Filter Review
Просмотров 11 тыс.7 лет назад
A short review of the XCSource photo filter pack, I talk about the pros and cons with sample images.
Barry Jazz Finnegan at The Ink Factory
Просмотров 1,8 тыс.10 лет назад
Barry Jazz Finnegan at The Ink Factory
Pls how do i locate the exposure triangle on my mobile phone?
Really enjoyed your perspective, Adrian! I totally agree that the Kodachrome slides are so beautiful and hold up on their own. After removing dust and digitizing, I tend to avoid any color adjustments once I have the photos in Lightroom. But I do try to pull out detail in the shadows/highlights by pulling them up/down, because it seems as though most scanning setups can't seem to grasp the same dynamic range of film without doing so. I will add that when I get around to the Ektachrome slides where all the cyan has faded away which result in that nasty red cast, color correction is a must.
The f series is my favorite and way underated.
Great video! Could you maybe share the specs for the adapter from this lens to sony e mount please? thanks!
Are there double stereo slides anymore ? 0:16
Great video. Very informative compared to the others I’ve been watching. Thank you!🙏
I see that someone commented that the ISO removes a lacquer finish on the slides. I have my doubts about this because I tried removing some lacquer from another project with ISO and it didn't effect the finish at all. Is there anyone who can confirm the report that the ISO damages the slides?
Slides from the 60s had a varnish on them. It will remove it. Best option is using Pec pads and PEC12. This will not scratch or damage the film and will clean it better. Do not use cottonballs. They leave fine scratches all over.
I have color slides my father took in Rome Italy in late 1945. I have been using some 6 inch pvc plumbing pipe as a support, setting the slide on a light table with a mask surrounding the slide and using my digital camera to take pictures of the slide and then crop out the cardboard frame. My device is a little more complex than that but it works and is very quick and very high quality compared to scanners. Cost less than $5. I am glad I can now clean the slides with Isopro. I worried about removing the dyes and just blew off the dust. I also have some shots he took in New Guinea in '46. I too am amazed at the survival of those images. Waikiki beach with NO HOTELS.
Love the ingenuity I see and hear about with some camera scanning setups. I was recently digitizing some of my grandpa's slides from the '70s in Waikiki and even then it was still so underdeveloped compared to today.
Geeze! Get to the point and stop painting a picture.
At the end Adrian says his father maybe took the photos bearing in mind the limited bandwidth of the medium. I don't think this would have been the case. They do fade with age. I have some from the 1960s and I remember them being super bright and colourful back then, now they have faded somewhat.
Unfortunately the focus points seemed to differ on the f4 comparison with the Pentax lens clearly being focused to a nearer distance than the Canon. Illustrated by the fall of in focus on the topplate detail on the Pentax example. I guess this lead to the perception that the Pentax was sharper at that apperture as one really notices the specs of grit and the highly machined edges of the lens mount first when viewing the image subject. I have the SMC Pentax-A f1.7 and can concurr wholeheartedly with you observations on its superior construction qualities compared to more modern 'equivalents'. A lovely lens to use. I also have the SMC Pentax-A 70-210 f4 (constant) macro zoom. Also a very fine lens IMO.
50mm 1.7 or 50mm 2.0 or 50mm 1.4? How would rate or compare these lenses?
I’m about to embark on the same project with 16 carousels and several random boxes full of my Dad’s slides from the 50’s through 70’s. Some of them are a wee bit grimy, so I’ll give it a go with some ISO. Thanks for the video and the inspiration.
Don't use cottonballs and alcohol. Use Pec pads and PEC12. Take the film out of the cardboard and clean it. Don't rub the shiny side. Just clean the emulsion side. Your film will thank you. Also if you don't want to spend days color balancing and fixing scratches, buy a Pacific Image Primefilm scanner and Silverfast Software HDR. It has a special color setting built in for Kodachromes and removing dirt and scratches. Around Christmas, Silverfast usually has sales on their software. The scanner runs USD$500 and maybe $300-$400 USD for the software.
It’s a Pentax M 50mm 1.7
Can a stamp be worth more attached to an old letter from the president.
Niice lens, true. It is the opposite of sigma 50mm art. But I like it because of faded pastel colours and softness. 1.4/1.2 are much more expensive, rare, harder to focus and heavier
Wonderful presentation. Thank you for sharing. I agree on so many levels.
really enjoyed this. best wishes from Scarborough, England. 🙂
Thank you. I learnt a lot.
I inherited my dad's old paparazzo slides from nyc in the 70s. They were pristine, I stupidly flew down to my house in PR with out protecting them properly, & I guess going through the airport ruined the images they're all spotted now. I was so upset with myself. They were perfect for decades before I got them
Dissapointing, just been luren away to another time waisting movie of a pensionada eager to have his face on RUclips. Where's the instruction on how to correct the color fade? That you should clean the slides even a child knows.
I have one of these. Haven't used it for years. That's about to change...
I love this video. 💙
I really enjoyed watching your video. Maybe think. I’ve was looking for something about the physical restoration but you made me think about a lot more
If you can find the PKA version of this Pentax M, all the info transmits to a Pentax DSLR camera body.
Hello quick question, where do I get those slides? I’ve been searching the internet for hours now and I can’t find anything on the slides itself. Is there a specific camera that needs to be used for those slides?
nah any film camera would work, but slide silms need to be correctly exposed and there arent many made right now.(kodak ektachrome and fuji velvia and provia are the only oens being made, fuji huge doubt because covid and are winding down film) also they are developed using e6 process which is different to c41 colour negative and not many labs do that
Really hate these reveals. Yes the vintage lenses are golden. Unfortunately some guy comes along and blabs and the prices jump for several months. Just cool it.
I've used one of these as my main lens for 15yrs! Absolutly amazing lens, at an amazing price!
My late Grandfather had a bunch of Kodachrome slides from the 50s and 60s that lasted perfectly preserved in his hall closet for decades. I got a hold of them and decided to keep them in a fireproof safe for extra peace of mind as well as safe keeping - Biggest mistake of my life... They got completely moldy and are close to being ruined now. Any suggestions guys?
It depends on how deep the mold has taken root. Kodachrome is pretty resistent to mold, so if you use a professional cleaner, and a lot of rubbing (on the non-shiny side only) you should be able to clean the mold. It will take some work, but it does clean up nicely. Alcohol will not do the job, but PEC12 will clean them. Make sure you do not scrub the shiny side, just the emulsion side. A few drops of PEC12 on the film and the pad will be enough. Wipe it for 10-15 seconds with the pad. If the shiny side also has mold, use more care, and wipe it down, but do not apply pressure. You don't want to cause scratches. You can use pressure to clean the emulsion side. Experiment on a throwaway slide first. I had a 1000 slides that were very moldy. The Kodachrome slides survived and cleaned up the best. There is very little evidence of mold on them now. Pure alcohol does little to clean mold. It will remove fingerprints but not much else.
Hi! Your seaweed video is very good. Can you change it from content made for children so I can save it to my playlist? Thanks a lot.
"FILM-UM" What a marroon! Isopropyl alcohol and such has destroyed the slides you TWIT! Kodachrome slides were LACQUERED as the final step in processing, so you removed that protective coating and those slides will now fade and grow fungus (I'm sure they have by now!) and the images will be gone. You have no IDEA what you are prattling on about. "Limited range" is ten thousand times what any digital medium can ever capture and that includes my $150,000 Capture One medium format digital camera.
Perhaps you could give us more detail regarding the back story to this. What were you wearing when you found the pictures.. What had you eaten recently? Your weight at the time you found these? Your marital status at the time?
Wtf ?
Shooting video with this lens on a Sony NEX VG20, everything manual ..... absolutely beautiful cinematography especially when you want a really genuine reminiscence to the scene. I also love the slight flatness it can deliver (open up then add a de-clicked variable ND filter to control the F) , it contributes so much to the colour grading in post if you can't film in log (i.e. the VG20). Love it.
You nailed it. The beauty of Kodachrome is absolutely the connection between the composition, exposure and the film processing. Photograers intentionally pursued scenes with the colours that they knew would pop on Kodachrome. Like a Coka Cola sign or a street scene with signs or the famously photographed Golden Gate Exposition in 1939 - 1940.
Very enjoy this video
Thanks for this, I have 100 or so slides here..........I need that converter
Nine minutes about nothing. Waste of time.
Agreed. Very misleading video title. No how-to.
Irish people all have one thing in common, they like to hear themselves speak.
Nine and a half minutes invested in trying to find out how to repair a dirty/spotty slide. Meager payoff. Less than 10 seconds showing isopropyl alcohol and Q tips. No process. Gaaaaahhhh.
My grandfather gave me his entire slide collection from years of shooting and ive been slowly scanning them for him, as someone who has shot a lot of film even till today, Kodachrome slides still suprise the hell out of me. No other film resists aging like kodachrome you can take a 50 year old slide like some ive scanned and it looks as good today as the day it was taken.
How lucky you're my dear friend Jehovah bless you and your family too
Best film ever!!
Thumb down because of jumping from f/1.8 to f/4. :(
Speaking as a photog of the era your Dad was shooting in, the choice of film was a part of the process. You wanted deeply saturated colors on the warm side you used Kodachrome, assuming you had the light necessary to shoot it. It had a fairly low ASA and so was not really suited to artificial lighting. It loved full sunlight. Nicely done!
Fujichrome ASA 100 and 400 easily, easily rivalled Kodachrome, and with a Skylight Filter on the lens water and sky scenes were super clear and bright.
I shot a lot of Kodachrome and Ektachrome back in the '80's. So, I have some boxes in storage in Canada for 20 years and I worried about how they faired over the years. 3 years ago, I was there and had a quick look, they were perfectly preserved! Now I want to get back there again and retrieve and scan them, I just have to get back there after Covid. (I live in Japan now). Amazing how well K-chrome holds up!
Very useful video. Are surgical spirits isopropyl alcohol? I’m working to organize my late father’s collection of about 5000 slides. Many are Kodakchrome, but many are Ectachrome. I don’t know the chemistry of cleaning slides. Do you have any experience with cleaning Ectachrome slide using the cleaners you employed?
Hi ya, Yes surgical spirits isopropyl alcohol are the same, I've no other experience this was my first attempt, I'd suggest taking a sample slide and testing with that - Maybe grab one that is not a prize winner ;-)
Using 99% alcohol is ok. But using PEC12 and their pads is much better. It will remove more dirt and grime faster than alcohol and won't damage the film. Cottonballs should not be used as they will introduce scratches into the film. You won't see them but they will show up.
The intro made me think of Alton Brown
That's great, made me laugh
Placed on the camera body that the Pentax lens was designed for and not going through a adapter ring, I would guarantee the Pentax lens would be on par if not better than the Cannon glass.
Kodachrome, supposedly the most resilient slide film as regards deterioration. Oddly though, the Kodachrome slides I have (and am currently scanning etc) from around 1979/80 are the ones that seem to have suffered the most. Quite a bit of grime on some of them similar to the landscape one you show but also mould, small specks that have grown outwards into the emulsion in a fine series of spidery 'crazed' lines pattern. They also seem to have faded and colour shifted more than other brands from the same period.
Sorry for the late reply - I'm surprised it deteriorated, how was it stored? Some of the slides I had a lot of dust and it took many soft attempts to clean.
It all depends on how they were stored. I don't know what the ideal conditions are for storing them, though.
@@omi_god Thanks.
Just bought this lens .i paid 450 Canadian dollars for a modern day AF Pentax 50 mm and this vintage lens I paid around 50 dollars , it's in perfect condition and sharp as hell. Good video .
Thanks ;-)
Good video! But how about shooting Kodachrome now? Can you scan it like any other 35mm film...? Straight from camera? I've got the possibility to get my hands on a bunch of these, but I know it's no longer developed, apart from B&W and that seems like a shame. So I'm researching about scanning them and getting that colour out :)
I'd love to shoot some Kodachrome - It was no problem to scan for me
@@adrianheffernan102 ok, so you’d shoot and just go straight to scanning then. Hm... maybe I’ll have to hit the old guy up about them😎😉
@@SoppenSin 100% yes
Nothing regarding cleaning the film
Did the surgical spirits work out ok for you? Have the exact same bottle of stuff (also in Ireland) and was afraid what sort of additives could be in it. Did you notice any residues?
Sorry for the late reply, yes it worked perfectly. I did clean them with water after, with a cotton bud. Hope yours went well.
Yeah I’ve been undergoing a Kodachrome project myself with a bit over 500 slides and it is quite interesting to see someone else’s live from 50+ years ago through a physical picture, I’ve also begun to start archiving old film mostly Kodachrome and if you’d like I’d love to archive them and digitize them at a very high resolution thank you for the content I really love the sentiment
Wow 500 slides, I can really relate to your comment about seeing someone's life through the picture ( I feel its the magic of photography) Thanks so much for the comment
Adrian Heffernan yeah it truly is a project more people should do because old slides are being thrown away daily and I just want to preserve all that history
@@technol-bismol3778 Im still shooting new slides today, Ektachrome is a great film pretty close to kodachrome just not as saturated but all my vacations are shot on film because I know that in 50 years it can be scanned and will be good but digital files can be lost. Most digital images are literally put onto film to preserve them in the long run because its still cheaper to archive on film than digital and it wont degrade as bad.
@@pilsplease7561 yes I shoot Ektachrome and I actually develop and scan myself which is fun to say the least
@@pilsplease7561 How sad! Still try saving them by giving a try at cleaning a few to see if they can be saved. It's okay if the cardboard frame has to be tossed.