Nikon F2 Vs. Canon Elan 7e on Ilford Delta 3200 at Morin Surfboards
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- Опубликовано: 23 сен 2018
- Joey's Camera: Canon Elan 7e w/ 50mm f/1.4
Dereks Camera: Nikon F2 w/ 24mm f/2.8
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Buy Ilford Delta 3200: amzn.to/2NALujL
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Joey: / awesomecameras
Derek: / derekstreet - Хобби
I love the graininess. I haven’t seen grain like that in a while
Photo zombies eat GRRAAAAAIIIINNNSSSSS!
I've used it once before at a show with a point and shoot. I really liked it! You kind of grow to love the grain. I would personally use this film at a show/party/event.
Siiiiiiiiiiiickkkkkkkk!!! Loving the theme dude, went well with the grain of the photos 🔥🔥
Thanks duuuude!
The shots are great but I think I could do with a little less grain. Just my opinion. Great vid as always.
I feel ya man! it can be a little distraction in some cases...
Makes it a little harder to really appreciate the texture of the boards
i thought this film had ugly shaped grain i preferred using fuji neopan 1600 and pushing it or kodak T max 3200 or 400 pushed to 3200
Agree
It all depends on the developer. I don't know which dev they used, but I'm fairly certain it wasn't ment for this film. I've shot loads of this film and developed in Ilfotec HC getting much smoother grain.
I'm loving the grain in this. Somehow it makes the action of making the board feel stronger and real.
Thanks for watching!
yup that's my dad shaping
heck ya! what up Hudson!
nutin much just surfing and school. your videos are so sick keep up the good work 🤙🏻
Great shots, awesome to see the shaping process too!
Wow this film looks awesome!!! Definitely need to get me a roll!!
Go get some!! what are you waiting for !? ;)
You always present the best content about films. Love your channel!
Thanks so much!! Glad to have you here!
What a cool spot to shoot! You guys came away with some neat shots. I love behind the scenes stuff. I read an article a few months ago (I can't recall the photographer) who documented the hand-making of old Japanese fishing boats. I was pretty rad to get a look at exactly what went in to the forming the wood, and throughout the construction.
thanks so much!! were always looking for something interesting to shoot!! let me know if you figure out that photographer youre thinking of!!
I like the montage of the images, documentary style. It should not be about the film, look at the craftsmanship! Although I think for this this subject, the grain of the images go well with the dust produced by the sanding. Cool video. Hats off to the gentleman making the board. 👌🏻👏🏻👍🏻🙏🏻
I've used the Delta 3200 once, like you said it is not for everything but the trainy finish gives an edgy finish that look nice in some situation. I used it to take photo at a local wrestling which gaves the look I was looking for
great shots and I love the graininess
Thanks Anna!
DUDE! The Elan 7E with a 50mm f1.4 was my first setup that got me into film! Way to represent!
its the first camera I bought with my own money, back in 1999! I still love it and use it more than any other camera I've owned!
Really nice photos! I love photos that show the culture around the sport and not the actual sport itself. I do the same but with skateboarding.
One of your best videos in my opinion
Thanks so much! I put alot of hard work into this one :)
@@AwesomeCameras it definitely shows 😁 the music worked really well and the black and white with the grain really matched the subject matter.
Beautiful shots, I think the grainy stock adds to the vibe of the photos. The Delta coupled perfectly with the constant dust and fibreglass spewing everywhere. Great video!
Thanks so much! I agree completely,! Love the grain with the dust
I had trouble to focusing on the lowlight.you did it great joey! Nice.work
Cool shots and great video guys, keep it up !
Thanks Greg!! We've got a ton of fun stuff in the works. thanks for watching!
Right tool for the right job Great look, well done!
Thanks for watching Ron!
I think I'm going to have to pick up some Delta 3200 now. I like that high ISO b&w film makes it easy to blow highlights out, makes for some really cool looking shots. Man I wish there was a place near me that I could go to pick up film in person. But I guess that's the age we live in.
Ya, you'd probably get a better deal online anyhow. Film Photography Project has great prices on film. Not sure if they carry Delta though, but worth checking out
There is a strong contrast between the digital filming and the super-grainy Ilford Delta 3200.
Definitly if you want an artisan look choose Delta 3200
Thanks! I love that same aspect! It seems to pop more when I use black and white photos
I love this film - I usually pull a full stop to 1600 to get more contrast. Nice video, buddy.
I love the grain that Delta 3200 gives, it adds that little extra something to these shots. grain like this is not something you want in all your pics, sometimes you want a nice low grain film for more clarity and other times you want a film like this to add to the atmosphere of the shot, and worked well in this case. :-)
Great compositional layout on the stills and perfect storytelling. The grain from 3200 compliments the dust from the work environment.
Thanks! Ya I love the grain and the dust blending together in the photos!
I used to use is for wet Motocross and scrambling events where the grain really made mud look great
Only a few videos deep on the channel but you’ve already covered a stack of stuff iv been wanting to try... this film is one of them. Love the grain for these shots. I’m going to be using a roll during a hardcore show so fingers crossed
heck ya!! tag me in some of those photos if you post them ti IG! @awesomecameras
Awesome images! I definitely need to try some delta 3200
Get on it!! what are you waiting for!?!?! ;)
I have a roll of Delta 3200 120 in my fridge waiting for a moody rainy day, unfortunately i live in Australia and i think it will be expired before i get one, cool video fella's the shots look pretty awesome i reckon. They will look great printed in the darkroom.
Don't wait for a rainy day! Just use it around dusk :)
IMO, Delta 3200 lends itself better to more available light, as it works well with contrast. But without you can end up with flatter images and because of the grain it kinda makes it muddy. I really like a lot of the photos though. Especially the ones taken from the front of the surfboard
You know, I forgot what you looked like with the beard until I just saw the image for the HP5 v. JCH video! Thanks for the excellent content!
ha, the beard will be back some day I'm sure... thanks for watching!!!
Woah, this was a good insight into how a surfboard is made! The editing is getting better and better with each video guys. And I love the grains Delta 3200 produces. Been planning to get a couple of rolls and shoot some gigs. But they are so hard to come by here in India. Just out out of curiosity, shouldn't you all be wearing a face mask or something while shaving the board?
Ya we probably should have been. But the room has surprisingly good ventilation. The intakes are down by the floor, so the dust gets sucked down pretty quick. But with 3 people walking around in there, we kicked up a little extra dust than normal
I agree with you, Joey, that Ilford Delta 3200 and HP5 Plus 400 pushed to 3200 are worlds apart. I've used both, and I prefer HP5 with a push when I need to keep details in low light. HP5 Plus is also cheaper per-roll that Delta 3200. If you can manage it, maybe have a three-way comparison between HP5, Delta 3200, and TMax P3200?
Great video and good pics 😉
Thanks so much!
Nice gear, Nice photos, Skilled workers. Love the Delta 3200!
Nice look. I expected lots of grain & this is what I saw. However the grain was well behaved & consistent. Very pleasing
Dope video my man.
Haha I love how everything's edited with the music. Perfect
Thanks! Been working on my editing technique!
Great shots, I love that grain!
Thanks so much!
I like the 3200 because it's important to have options, if everything was smooth and non grainy then it would all look the same so I did good choice but I think 9 bucks for a roll of 12 frames or whatever is too much to ask. But then again I'm on a budget LOL. What do you think?
Would you have been able to capture those images without 3200 speed film? If not, I don't think it matters whether one "likes" the grain or not. I think some of the images came out very nice. Particularly I like some of the closer ones mid-sanding where they really seem to capture the work taking place.
It's an acquired taste, you either love or you don't. It's great for documentary and fine art.
Nice work. I love Delta 3200
I definitely enjoyed it. will shoot again for sure!
Great, try pushing HP5 to 3200 and compare
That's a great idea, I'll have to add it to our list of videos to make
Digging the video, usually I'll pull it a stop to lessen the appearance of the grain. Which is kinda weird because I'll shoot Tmax p3200 at the "box speed" and not mind the grain. Maybe it's the difference in the structure
yeah, must be the different grain structure :)
Delta 3200 is my go to bw Film BECAUSE of the GRAIN!!
Great shots and video. My favorites were definately the close ups since I thought that showed a real relationship between a creator and creation. Tbh I was mostly imagining how cramped it must have been in there. Also wondered why he wasnt wearing a mask with all that gunk in the air.
Thanks for watching! I love photographing a Craftsman practicing his/her trade. And as for the mask, not really sure. We didn't wear them either. It wasn't all that bad. Probably should have at least worn eye protection. I did get some dust in my eye that day
This was rad.
Thanks George!
I do like this film. I shoot often with it, or HP5 @ 1600. I think the only reason why i shoot film is analog grain.
Those images are sick! I love the film but I prefer the Kodak p3200 better as I think the grain structure is more nicer looking
I like them both, super excited to do a side by side comparison of the two.
Please slow the shots down of the photos next time. I had to keep pausing the video to look at them. Otherwise really cool!
Sorry, I know they're quick. But we both shot a full rolls of film, so there was a ton of photos I wanted to include in the video. as well as the 100%crop view of the photos. There is link to the full gallery of photos in the description for your viewing pleasure :)
Awesome camera's is awesome camera's without the beard bro
I preferred the wide angle shots - the grain was getting to be a little much in the cropped views. With the wide-angle shots, the grain was tolerable from an "artistic" perspective. In the the closer-cropped shots, it became a mish-mash - there wasn't enough "contextual information" in the shot to allow the brain to do its own "filtration and correction" on the grain - After a while - my head is thinking, "Is that foam-core dust from sanding or image grain??" There was not a great deal of contrast, either (everything was dumped in the grey-scale), but that's the nature of the 3200 beast, I would suppose.
Really cool shots, though. Good video. The shots were really like Craig Stecyk's - which is a good thing.
that glorious grain 🤤
I knoooow! Love it!
grain is
Thanks for watching
Why did the guy that develops my film said he could do black & white with color film?? I would be wasting my money on b&w film?
Look at me...I'm first!
Nailed it!!
Ok so it's film grain (which is good) rather than digital noise (which is bad), but the end result is the same - quite the distracting hot mess! I paraphrase someone smarter than me, "Just because you Can, doesn't mean you Should" - I'd shoot digital here. Heck I keep a 3 year old phone that can do more justice illustrating this man's craft (no seriously, it has a rgbw sensor, still kicks butt at 3200 nowadays).
great shots, and totally love the grain
thanks so much!!!