No, you were right the first time, for a sharp shot you need the focal length of the lens as shutter speed, Minimum, so that means for the 105 lens you would need a 1\125th to hand hold!
I can't remember which one it was, but there are a few I hit regularly in northern Illinois. Volo Antique Mall is one, but I've found that most antique malls, even in other states like South Carolina, tend to have at least one booth with at a couple vintage cameras for sale.
Beautiful photos. I have a couple of box cameras and some 120 film, this totally encourages me.
Thanks! Box cameras give you a truly unique look.
Great photos! Gotta take my Kodak Brownie off the shelf and take some shots.
Thanks! Yeah, already loaded another roll in ours and looking to shoot some summer photography!
yes, I get you, PS you can re-spool onto a 620 spool, and shoot, then re-spool onto 120 for development, as long as the camera comes with the spools.
We actually made a video about that a while back, but then Sean ruined the film while trying to self-develop it :D
@@FotodioxInc Yes, if you want another link, film photography podcast, Mr. Russo did one on this topic, showing how the spools work.
@@andyvan5692 Oh yeah, we love the FPP here at Fotodiox! We've done a couple reviews of their film stocks, and Sean met him on a film walk years back.
No, you were right the first time, for a sharp shot you need the focal length of the lens as shutter speed, Minimum, so that means for the 105 lens you would need a 1\125th to hand hold!
I guess the good people at Spartus didn't mind that their users would get motion blur in their shots :)
Great video. What antique mall/store did you go where they sell such nice cameras?
I can't remember which one it was, but there are a few I hit regularly in northern Illinois. Volo Antique Mall is one, but I've found that most antique malls, even in other states like South Carolina, tend to have at least one booth with at a couple vintage cameras for sale.
Do you have to take this film to be developed once used?
Yes, you have to either develop it yourself or send the film to a lab to get developed.
Does it record film?
Yes, it uses 120 roll film.