For the first time in my life the algorithm actually did some decent job in recommending me your channel, just wanted to say that I really enjoy watching your videos, they seem very fresh to me compared to the usual "photography/analog/vibes" content I've come across so far, hope you'll keep up the amazing work!
TLR getting no respect. Some of the most beautiful and useful 120 cameras were TLRs rolleiflex made them until the 2000s and mamiya with their c interchangeable lenses were around until late 90s. 😢
I was a professional photographer in Kansas since 1973. I used mostly Vericolor II at the end of that career. Using a medium format camera (RB 67) to shoot portraits, weddings and almost everything on 120 and 220 film. I found I was more than equal to any 35mm format.
@@YvonneHansonPhotography honestly though. Thank you so much for the content you put out. I just realized I commented from an old account. But you’ve given me the inspiration I needed to start making videos of my own to share my own work on RUclips from main account. Please keep these up and coming!
@@henry2941 I' really glad you found my videos inspiring!! Thats really cool to hear! If you want to drop the name for your other account, I'd be keen to subscribe :o
Knowledge can be so random to many, trying to organize so there is a flow that captures most of a subject is one method and done fairly well here. Metering for flash is an art, usually now done looking at a histogram. If you do have a digital body you can take test shots using the same iso, shutter speed and f-stop. We previewed exposure for slide (transparency) film using Polaroid of similar speed. In addition to viewing exposure, we looked at composition, safety concerns, product quality… Photography can be a process with many different rhythms, timing and end goals. All the best
You mentioned large format and slide film and I wanted to comment on that briefly. "Large Format" is usually considered to be a negative 4" x 5" or larger -- sometimes much larger. One of my earliest introductions to photography was my grandmother's "Ideals" magazines. This was a nostalgic feel-good accumulation of Americana with the distinction of superb large format photographs on Kodachrome slide film, painstakingly (and expensively) reproduced on heavy, glossy, very premium paper. If you ever have the chance to look through an Ideals magazine from the 1960s or 70s, it's worth the effort. I believe that a lot of the full-page photographs were made with 8 x 10 cameras and a well done 8x10 slide, particularly a Kodachrome slide, is breathtaking, regardless of the subject.
I was thinking about doing this recently!! I even wrote out my tiers. I am not quite familiar enough with iceberg stuff so I kind of backed off. But I'm glad you've done it!!
You should make one! There's two versions that Ive seen online, both with very different entries. Even so, there's a bunch of stuff missing that should be included, like film soup, lomography, novelty films, polaroids, all kinds of stuff!!
Very imformative and entertaining video. You were on my recommended page and I'm grateful that YT decided you were a good match for me and my film photography passion.
now the AE-1 is a solid camera but undercuting pentax lol no the k1000 was $300 cheeper than the AE-1 in 1976 and the AE-1 has an electric shutter and the k1000 is a fully mechanical manual camera. the only thing that the k1000 needed a battery for was the light meter but the ae 1 was one frst cameras with a microprocessor which is cool. so for a beginner camera the k1000 in my opinion is better because you don't have a an electric shutter that can malfunction.
6x4.5, 6x6, 6x7, 6x8, 6x9, 6x12, 6x17 are all the 120/220 film formats I can think of. 70mm and special long roll film for school photography was also used.
"Canon managed to undercut them with cheaply made Canon AE1". That's right. Cheaply made. And that's the reason too many of those cameras are dying these days...
Haha well, i should have looked up "5x9 film photography" and I would have gotten an answer pretty quick, but instead I was looking up "5x9 rangefinders" "what are 5x9 rangefinders" etc. And I was getting lists of "the best 5x9 rangefinder cameras" but nothing about what they actually are. I was also doing a lot of this research at midnight so that might have had something to do with it...
i think he means "120mm film", the forbidden film term lol it's actually 61mm and is called 120 film. and 135 film is 35mm. enjoying the vid and just subscribed! keep up the great work!
While she is more than a bit of a motor-mouth, I do not think that explains why there seems not logic or point to this video of the iceberg" she is rapping on about. I think the idea was that at the op, you see the aspects of film photography which require noting, no ideas, no knowledge, by someone trying to take a photo. As layers progress down, each seems a bit more demanding of tghe user than the previous. If you slow her down enough to follow, the rest of its seems high grade nonsense. Got to check her videos now to see just what is going on in the background.
OOO let me help. For people who have difficulty keeping up, there's a little gear icon in the lower right hand corner you can use to slow the video down so it's more your speed :)
For the first time in my life the algorithm actually did some decent job in recommending me your channel, just wanted to say that I really enjoy watching your videos, they seem very fresh to me compared to the usual "photography/analog/vibes" content I've come across so far, hope you'll keep up the amazing work!
Aye thank you so much! I really appreciate that, and I'm glad to hear the algorithm is on my side haha
TLR getting no respect. Some of the most beautiful and useful 120 cameras were TLRs rolleiflex made them until the 2000s and mamiya with their c interchangeable lenses were around until late 90s. 😢
Friendly reminder That CLA is also for film cameras, not only lenses...
I was a professional photographer in Kansas since 1973. I used mostly Vericolor II at the end of that career. Using a medium format camera (RB 67) to shoot portraits, weddings and almost everything on 120 and 220 film. I found I was more than equal to any 35mm format.
Love the concept of iceberg! Never heard of it. Love your energy and enthusiasm!
Thanks so much for watching! There's another version of this iceberg so maybe I'll make another set of videos one day!
You had me until you said “120 MILLIMETER film”.
STRAIGHT TO JAIL.
(Subscribed though because content is still amazing)
OMG NO I'll take myself to jail 😭 hahaha, thanks for subscribing despite this obscenity.
@@YvonneHansonPhotography honestly though. Thank you so much for the content you put out. I just realized I commented from an old account. But you’ve given me the inspiration I needed to start making videos of my own to share my own work on RUclips from main account.
Please keep these up and coming!
@@henry2941 I' really glad you found my videos inspiring!! Thats really cool to hear! If you want to drop the name for your other account, I'd be keen to subscribe :o
I’m new to photography and came across your video by chance; entertained till the end. Can’t wait for part 2!
Thanks so much for watching! Buckle up, because part 2 gets way more dense haha
I can feel the rabbit hole hopening again watching this video and the second part :) wonderful video by the way!!!
Thanks so much for watching! And yeah the rabbit hole is real- I feel like each entry's explanation is just the tip of its own iceberg haha
Knowledge can be so random to many, trying to organize so there is a flow that captures most of a subject is one method and done fairly well here. Metering for flash is an art, usually now done looking at a histogram. If you do have a digital body you can take test shots using the same iso, shutter speed and f-stop. We previewed exposure for slide (transparency) film using Polaroid of similar speed. In addition to viewing exposure, we looked at composition, safety concerns, product quality… Photography can be a process with many different rhythms, timing and end goals. All the best
I always called autofocus “outafocus” because it took long and always focused on the wrong thing.
You mentioned large format and slide film and I wanted to comment on that briefly. "Large Format" is usually considered to be a negative 4" x 5" or larger -- sometimes much larger. One of my earliest introductions to photography was my grandmother's "Ideals" magazines. This was a nostalgic feel-good accumulation of Americana with the distinction of superb large format photographs on Kodachrome slide film, painstakingly (and expensively) reproduced on heavy, glossy, very premium paper. If you ever have the chance to look through an Ideals magazine from the 1960s or 70s, it's worth the effort. I believe that a lot of the full-page photographs were made with 8 x 10 cameras and a well done 8x10 slide, particularly a Kodachrome slide, is breathtaking, regardless of the subject.
I was thinking about doing this recently!! I even wrote out my tiers. I am not quite familiar enough with iceberg stuff so I kind of backed off. But I'm glad you've done it!!
Also, I can't stand Analogcirclejerk. 😅😅😅
You should make one! There's two versions that Ive seen online, both with very different entries. Even so, there's a bunch of stuff missing that should be included, like film soup, lomography, novelty films, polaroids, all kinds of stuff!!
@@JamieMPhoto haha, I find like 10% of the memes funny and 90% repetitive and obnoxious. That said, I keep going back for more...
@@YvonneHansonPhotography I will admit that i do drop in on it ... And I'll get back to work on that iceberg video. :)
Very imformative and entertaining video. You were on my recommended page and I'm grateful that YT decided you were a good match for me and my film photography passion.
I'm happy to hear that! Both that you found this video entertaining, and that YT is recommending me :D
now the AE-1 is a solid camera but undercuting pentax lol no the k1000 was $300 cheeper than the AE-1 in 1976 and the AE-1 has an electric shutter and the k1000 is a fully mechanical manual camera. the only thing that the k1000 needed a battery for was the light meter but the ae 1 was one frst cameras with a microprocessor which is cool. so for a beginner camera the k1000 in my opinion is better because you don't have a an electric shutter that can malfunction.
I stand corrected! I guess the K1000 doesn't need it's batteries replaced very often at all, eh? That's my kind of camera....
That electric shutter malfunctioning is very real and financially painful
nice videos, just subscribed, thanks for the hard work!
Thanks for subscribing! I'm glad you enjoyed watching :D
Love this!
Part 2, Part 2, Part 2!
Also someone should add 6x17 medium format film in one of the lowest tiers :D
hahaha, I don't even think my brain can conjure an image of what that camera would look like...
6x4.5, 6x6, 6x7, 6x8, 6x9, 6x12, 6x17 are all the 120/220 film formats I can think of. 70mm and special long roll film for school photography was also used.
I started shooting on a Kodak TLR when I was in grade school
This was helpful :)
Thank you for watching :D I'm glad it was helpful!
A fellow Vancouver based film photographer here. You have a new sub. :)
heya! Good to connect with a fellow Vancouverite!
I’m just using Fujifilm Superia 400 or 200. Super cheap at Walmart!
"Canon managed to undercut them with cheaply made Canon AE1". That's right. Cheaply made. And that's the reason too many of those cameras are dying these days...
@15:30 REALLY?
Haha well, i should have looked up "5x9 film photography" and I would have gotten an answer pretty quick, but instead I was looking up "5x9 rangefinders" "what are 5x9 rangefinders" etc. And I was getting lists of "the best 5x9 rangefinder cameras" but nothing about what they actually are. I was also doing a lot of this research at midnight so that might have had something to do with it...
i think he means "120mm film", the forbidden film term lol it's actually 61mm and is called 120 film. and 135 film is 35mm. enjoying the vid and just subscribed! keep up the great work!
Autofocus don't get no respect 😂
It's true!!!
4$ /roll 🧐
Sorry to say this... you speak so fast... i can't keep up... i miss so much of what you're saying....
you can slow down the video speed using the gear icon in the lower right corner of the video!
While she is more than a bit of a motor-mouth, I do not think that explains why there seems not logic or point to this video of the iceberg" she is rapping on about. I think the idea was that at the op, you see the aspects of film photography which require noting, no ideas, no knowledge, by someone trying to take a photo. As layers progress down, each seems a bit more demanding of tghe user than the previous. If you slow her down enough to follow, the rest of its seems high grade nonsense. Got to check her videos now to see just what is going on in the background.
OOO let me help. For people who have difficulty keeping up, there's a little gear icon in the lower right hand corner you can use to slow the video down so it's more your speed :)
How did you get through typing this without rethinking whether you should comment it?