Dec
5
2014

It’s no secret that this is one of my favourite little blocks of steel. It’s hard to believe sometimes that this camera is nearly 60 years old when you see the results. My favourite characteristic of the images though has to be the film mask with its wavy edges. It gives each image a postage stamp like look and proves that you didn’t crop your image. More images and information about this camera can be seen here Super Paxette Photographers dont crop Paxette More Images Braun Super Paxette (Part 1) Braun Super Paxette (Part 2)
Because of the number of images I will break this into two seperate posts as well but here are the first 20. There was a lot of smoke from forest fires so many of the landscape images relect that.
1 comment | tags: Ektar, film, Paxette | posted in Cameras, Photography
Dec
2
2014

I may have discovered the worst place in Canada to try to go for a walk. The area around Toronto’s Pearson airport is a wasteland, the sidewalks are littered with holes and obstacles besides the fact they lead to nowhere. The obstacles seem to be primarily signs telling you to use a different non-existent path and unidentifiable flattened metal things that have come off of vehicles.

My favourite non helpful thing though was the cross walk that led to an island in the roadway with no other exit other than to push the button and wait to go back the way you had come. Later I discovered a less palatable frogger style run across a highway offered but I declined.
I think that the Cab industry must be in charge of the sidewalks

Some of the images from my survival of this pedestrian dystopia can be seen bellow but the most colourful thing and people happening there was the Jem and the Holograms convention that was meeting in the hotel I was staying at. (Ah the 1980’s what joy you continue to give the world) All of the images were shot with the Pentax Q7.

no comments | posted in Art observations, Photography
Nov
29
2014

After rewinding this film for what seemed like twice as long as needed and it also becoming much easier, it seemed reasonable that it was time to open my Braun Paxette. I was wrong. The light came streaming into the back of the camera like someone opening the blinds at a seedy motel. The worst part of it was the not knowing what was damaged and what was lost for the entire rest of the trip. Well it turned out that not that much was lost and a few of the images might have been improved. Someone is bound to ask me what app I used when I post them to Instagram. I might tell them I used the ‘Open the back App’.
no comments | posted in Photography, Processing
Nov
26
2014

The full-sized SLR lens is just there to give some scale for the Q7 and the 02 zoom lens. There may be some overlap with my film shots mostly because I use my Q7 as a lightmeter as well as a camera. These pictures are just some fun snaps of signs from a trip earlier this year. For many things the Q7 is perfectly adequite as a photography tool and there is no denying it’s diminutive nature can be a real advantage both in size and inconspicuousness.
no comments | posted in Cameras, Photography, Uncategorized
Nov
24
2014
That means there are only 14 possible chances at Polaroid Spectra awesomeness and if the poor distribution of the chemicals in this one is any indication the time is running out on these.

no comments
Nov
22
2014

It would have been a lot better story if it had ended as the simple trade of my Canon AE-1 for this Olympus SP35 Rangefinder but things never seem to be that easy. I suppose I should back up and start from the beginning. Back as a teenager I bought my first brand new camera a Minolta X700 (Yes the story goes back that far) Saving you from further boredom I will jump ahead to this year. I acquired a Canon A-1 which made my Canon AE-1 superfluous so I decided to sell it and a few others at the local flea-market. A fellow approached and was looking at the cameras, he too had a camera in a case around his neck. After a brief discussion it turned out it was an Olympus Sp35 a model which I had never seen before. It also turned out the wearer of said camera was a photography student and wasn’t happy with it for several reasons one of them being the rangefinder focusing. He wanted an SLR and I love rangefinders so we did a straight trade, the Canon for the Olympus, and that’s the point at which the story should have had a happy ending but unfortunately didn’t. I think he hardly got through the first roll before the Canon jammed which isn’t conducive to completing photo assignments. He happened to be taking the photography class with a friend of mine so he contacted me and I met with him to exchange cameras back but I also offered the alternative to keep the Canon and also receive a Minolta X700. A camera which may have been that first camera I ever owned but I can’t be sure because I had two. He took the Minolta and that’s the last I heard from him.
Well that’s the story of the camera swap at the swap meet. Fortunately the Olympus SP35 is a fine camera and it’s my new favourite, well until something else comes along.
1 comment | tags: camera, film, olympus | posted in Cameras, Photography
Nov
18
2014

What can I say about this camera that hasn’t already been said? Apparently not much, It just works well with no fuss and looks great doing it. The new Ricoh GR digital camera derives a lot from it despite the nearly 20 years that seperate them.

It’s not just a retro thing like some camera manufacturers are doing there is a continuum of design with Ricoh’s cameras. Good design doesn’t require radical changes.
no comments | posted in Cameras, Photography
Nov
14
2014


The Pentax Mz-6 may not be a tank of a camera like a Nikon F5 or the Pentax MZ-s from the same era but it offers all the necessary controls for any type of image making. It’s lightweight and compact meaning that the addition of the battery grip doesn’t turn it into a monster but rather allows the use of readily available AA batteries. Previously the Pentax Z1-p was my camera of choice for making 35mm film images but the MZ-6 has better usability and is closer in operation to the DSLR I use. A nice feature of this camera is its full compatibility with all K-mount lenses even ones without aperture rings. That matters when you try to use a lens such as the DFA100 Macro WR a lens without a physical ring for aperture control. It also allows the use of older manual aperture control lenses transferring the setting to the camera with a physical linkage something that is missing from the DSLRs.
no comments | posted in Cameras, Photography
Nov
12
2014

Freedom from the enslaving 4×3 images or even the oppressive 16×9. Only this Minolta will set you free with its 27×10 aspect ratio. Within its images you will be able to realize your dreams of wide horizons and grand vistas oh the vistas you will see. Perhaps I’m overstating it slightly but composing for what is nearly a 3×1 aspect ratio is certainly different. You really need to move away from the traditional notions of composition and divide the image area in new ways. It’s not always easy to fill the frame with interest but it’s also not a good idea compositionally to have large areas with nothing in them as they tend to appear very static. My Minolta Vista is looking pretty beat-up but it works perfectly.
3 comments | tags: panoramic | posted in Cameras, Photography
Nov
8
2014

Having bought one of the original Pentax Q cameras and having a few lenses for it, it seemed like an easy decision to then pick up this camera combination when it was on sale. First let’s get the main caveat of this camera out-of-the-way. Yes it has a tiny little sensor but if that is the only thing you go by your missing out on a fantastic little camera that does an admiral job of creating images. While it isn’t much larger than a point and shoot camera its versatility leaves all others behind. I have a selection of lenses from fish eye to adapted lenses equivalent to 500mm and beyond but for this post I’ve limited the images to those shot with the 5-15mm kit lens (23-69mm equivelent in terms of 35mm film). The combination does have quite a bit of chromatic aberration as seen in the 200% RAW detail at the top left but with a quick one click adjustment in Lightroom it can be somewhat mitigated as seen on the bottom right.

It’s small size means that I am more likely to take the camera along where every I go and the versatility of it means that I rarely feel like I needed a better camera. There is even more to this little beast that I’m not touching on but as a straight forward photography tool it packs a ton into its tiny little package. The pictures that follow are a mix of images straight out of the camera and some edited to be more in line with what I intended. Using the Q7 reminds me to have fun and create images rather than obsess over the technical aspects. (Yes those first two images are meant to look grainy and pictorial)
And finally if you click on the image bellow a full resolution image will open that I think demonstrates how much this camera and lens can resolve. It exceeds what I have been able to achieve with 35mm negative film in resolving power and rivals my older DSLR which is quite a feat.

no comments | tags: camera, Digital, Pentax | posted in Cameras, Photography