Well, I still don't have much to show for.
On the shooting side, things have been fun though. Just one click, wondering how the photo will turn out, forced to put more thought into composition and exposure, and no worries about batteries, chargers, memory cards or a dusty sensor (of course, other worries about 'enough film, where to have the rolls developed, where to buy more').
So far it seems film is rather forgiving when it comes to the right exposure, although I do seem to underexpose quite often. The M-A doesn't have a light meter, so I'm metering with a Voightlander light meter on top of the camera, and I have a handhold around.
The first two rolls of Kodak Tri-X 400 I had not only developed but also printed. I considered them test rolls, so nothing much spectacular on them, but it did give an impression of what I was doing right and wrong. Also more of an indication - seeing the character of Tri-X - when to use it and when not to use it... it's quite a learning curve.
Otherwise judging exposure with just the negatives (two rolls of Fuji Superia 200 so far) is not easy, since I don't have a baseline. I don't have a negative scanner yet. I wanted to experiment first with my Canon 5D-II and 100mm macro lens, to see if I could get acceptable results shooting the negatives and then processing them in Photoshop and then over to Lightroom. But it's a tedious way of processing. To get the whole negative properly focused isn't easy. Then the flash behind it needs to be evenly distributed. Then questions about color balance, how much flash, how to process exactly and how to handle the negatives without damaging them. It simply takes too much time per negative. And since I can't compare yet with a negative scanner, I don't know if I'm getting the best out of the negatives this way.
Anyway, here's one of my first color results done this way. I do plan on buying a scanner, so you might see this photo again in future. It will be a nice comparison as to which method gives the better results.
Sunday, August 30, 2015
Friday, May 1, 2015
Goodbye, hello...
No don't worry, it's still the same blog. It just looks a bit different.
Well dear reader, here's one of the last photos I took with my Leica M9 after its second sensor had cracked (crack in the corner cropped out).
I had a longwinded and rather boring story ready about how I traded in my M9 a few weeks ago (when it was in Germany for repair), tired of the sensor problems (ready for its third new sensor in barely 5 years), but who cares. Oh yeah, I now have a Leica M-A (I'm still in the Leica fold, since their lenses are awesome) - no more sensor or electronics, not even a lightmeter built in - and I'm trying film. No results yet, the first roll is still in the camera. It's an impressive machine though, this new M-A, with its smooth velvety black chrome and all mechanical innards... let's hope I know what I'm doing, since I never shot an analogue photo before.
Oh, and if you're attached to DNGMonochrome or DNGDeblur, not to worry. I will keep supporting the DNG software, also seeing the big photo archive I have myself. Next on the list for an upgrade is DNGMonochrome. I can't work on M9Tether anymore, but I don't think that's a big problem, seeing how that program was more or less finished and still does what it needs to do.
Well dear reader, here's one of the last photos I took with my Leica M9 after its second sensor had cracked (crack in the corner cropped out).
Beach under moonlight...
One of the last photos I took with my Leica M9.
Click on the photo for the bigger version.
Malaysia, 2 February 2015
One of the last photos I took with my Leica M9.
Click on the photo for the bigger version.
Malaysia, 2 February 2015
I had a longwinded and rather boring story ready about how I traded in my M9 a few weeks ago (when it was in Germany for repair), tired of the sensor problems (ready for its third new sensor in barely 5 years), but who cares. Oh yeah, I now have a Leica M-A (I'm still in the Leica fold, since their lenses are awesome) - no more sensor or electronics, not even a lightmeter built in - and I'm trying film. No results yet, the first roll is still in the camera. It's an impressive machine though, this new M-A, with its smooth velvety black chrome and all mechanical innards... let's hope I know what I'm doing, since I never shot an analogue photo before.
Oh, and if you're attached to DNGMonochrome or DNGDeblur, not to worry. I will keep supporting the DNG software, also seeing the big photo archive I have myself. Next on the list for an upgrade is DNGMonochrome. I can't work on M9Tether anymore, but I don't think that's a big problem, seeing how that program was more or less finished and still does what it needs to do.
Labels:
kuantan,
leica M9,
malaysia,
summilux 50mm f/1.4
Sunday, April 26, 2015
DNGDeblur 1.1.0 released
Some small changes and some bugfixes in this new release.
Changes and additions
Bug fixes
Note the first bug fix: if you use the Update function in version 1.0.0, it might land you on the DNGMonochrome page.
Download
You can download the new version of DNGDeblur here.
Changes and additions
- Speeds up the preview creation of DNGs
- When deblurring JPEGs, the EXIF information is now preserved in the saved copy
- Adds option to strip EXIF from JPEGs in the saved copy
Bug fixes
- After clicking the Update button with a new version available and then clicking 'Yes' on the question 'Download now?' the browser would open the DNGMonochrome page in stead of the DNGDeblur page
- When switching from a Leica T DNG or Sony A7s DNG to a JPEG in the list on the left, the notification about lens distortion would not disappear
Note the first bug fix: if you use the Update function in version 1.0.0, it might land you on the DNGMonochrome page.
Download
You can download the new version of DNGDeblur here.
Labels:
DNGDeblur
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