I've looking for different reviews of this camera cause I just found out that my parents got one and it has been stored for years. Now i'm willing to try it and im grateful for finding your video! I'm new with film photography, which type of film rolls do you recommend for this camera? Greetings from Mexico!
That's awesome to hear! This is a great first film camera because it has so many quality of life features! I'd say a fun one to test it out might be Fujifilm 200 or Kodak Ultramax. Both are color film. Eventually, you might consider Kodak Portra! It's my favorite! Which lens do you have?
This camera has more functionality than the 600 series of cameras. It's a successor in terms of when it came out. I'd say having tried both the 630, 650, and 10s that the 10s is the better camera. The 650 is super budget, so I'd definitely avoid that one.
Hi Colton. Great video and I agree with you… the EOS10 is a huge step forward for those years. Have you a user manual to know how clean the mirror or how to use all buttons?. Regards and thanks un advance.
Hey Thank you! I don't have a video manual for this camera. Is that what you're asking? I did find a manual for this camera online though! manualmachine.com/canon/eos10/7073520-user-manual/
I like that this one has auto-bracketing: makes remote shooting a little easier. Plus it has an interval timer, so in theory it could shoot the whole roll unattended for you 😂 It is not as tolerant of various lens adapters as newer models; you have to either try out a bunch, do some diy mods, or not quite lock the adapter in place. Batteries are slightly weird: 2CR5, so expect to pay $10-15 for those. But seriously: one of these cameras can cost less than your first roll of film!
Yeah the batteries aren't cheap but they do seem to last a pretty good amount of time for me! This camera has a lot of features which is really nice. And the fit in the hand is hard to beat!
@@ColtonMatocha I just finished a roll of Portra 400 on it to test it out, but i plan on using some Kodak Gold 100 for this project Ive got in mind about the unique train stations in my city.
One big pro of this particular camera is the fact, it doesn’t have an infrared frame counter so you can use infrared film in it without fogging the film, and that’s the only Eos film camera who doesn’t have this feature…
Yep. That's why I got mine. From what I understand, there actually is an IR sensor, but it's _very_ well shielded. And the manuals for other models mention IR film fogging; this one does not.
Incredibly underrated channel. Found you via your review of the Instax Mini Evo and your channel is full of gems!
You made my day with that comment! I'm glad you're enjoying the videos! I have quite a few more videos scheduled out so more are on the way!
I've looking for different reviews of this camera cause I just found out that my parents got one and it has been stored for years. Now i'm willing to try it and im grateful for finding your video! I'm new with film photography, which type of film rolls do you recommend for this camera?
Greetings from Mexico!
That's awesome to hear! This is a great first film camera because it has so many quality of life features! I'd say a fun one to test it out might be Fujifilm 200 or Kodak Ultramax. Both are color film. Eventually, you might consider Kodak Portra! It's my favorite! Which lens do you have?
Great video!!!! Which would you recommend me to purchase this model or Canon eos 600, 650? All the best
This camera has more functionality than the 600 series of cameras. It's a successor in terms of when it came out. I'd say having tried both the 630, 650, and 10s that the 10s is the better camera. The 650 is super budget, so I'd definitely avoid that one.
Спасибо за обзор! Отличная камера!
Thank you!
Hi Colton. Great video and I agree with you… the EOS10 is a huge step forward for those years. Have you a user manual to know how clean the mirror or how to use all buttons?. Regards and thanks un advance.
Hey Thank you! I don't have a video manual for this camera. Is that what you're asking?
I did find a manual for this camera online though! manualmachine.com/canon/eos10/7073520-user-manual/
Thanks very much for your answer!!.
Will Autofocus work with Canon 50 1.8 STM?
I believe it will because it uses the same mount system.
I like that this one has auto-bracketing: makes remote shooting a little easier. Plus it has an interval timer, so in theory it could shoot the whole roll unattended for you 😂
It is not as tolerant of various lens adapters as newer models; you have to either try out a bunch, do some diy mods, or not quite lock the adapter in place. Batteries are slightly weird: 2CR5, so expect to pay $10-15 for those. But seriously: one of these cameras can cost less than your first roll of film!
Yeah the batteries aren't cheap but they do seem to last a pretty good amount of time for me! This camera has a lot of features which is really nice. And the fit in the hand is hard to beat!
I just picked up the EOS 10! Gonna be a learning curve going from the cabinet ql17 g3 for sure
It's such a fun camera! I always get excited when I pick it up to shoot! What film stock are you planning to use first?
@@ColtonMatocha I just finished a roll of Portra 400 on it to test it out, but i plan on using some Kodak Gold 100 for this project Ive got in mind about the unique train stations in my city.
@@Skylarblue365 oh nice! I love both of those film stocks! Which lens do you use?
@@ColtonMatocha i believe its a 35mm-80mm lens right now. But I'm keeping my eye out for anything that can serve me better
@@Skylarblue365 That's a good lens! Can produce some sharp images! Keep in mind any Canon DSLR EF mount lens will work. Even the plastic fantastic!
T80 was the first with autofocus in '83, with the FD mount bayonet type.
That's fascinating! I didn't realize, or maybe forgot, that even existed!
@@ColtonMatochayeah! Quantaray made some lenses for it! Canon wanted more profit, even though FD mount was perfectly adaptable.
One big pro of this particular camera is the fact, it doesn’t have an infrared frame counter so you can use infrared film in it without fogging the film, and that’s the only Eos film camera who doesn’t have this feature…
Oh that's a really great callout! I didn't know that!
Yep. That's why I got mine. From what I understand, there actually is an IR sensor, but it's _very_ well shielded. And the manuals for other models mention IR film fogging; this one does not.