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Adventures on Film

Film Photography & Darkroom Printing Workshops, Portrait & Event Photography Huddersfield West Yorkshire
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Welcome to my Blog!  a place to hear about my ongoing obsession with film photography. We'll take a look behind the scenes on some of my creative projects, completely unscientific and subjective camera, lens and film reviews and most importantly photographs!

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Featured
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Nov 5, 2023
Portrait Shoots with the Carl Zeiss Sonnar 180mm 2.8 adapted to Pentax 67
Nov 5, 2023
Nov 5, 2023
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Oct 27, 2023
Kodak Aero Ektar 178mm 2.5 lens adapted to Pentax 67
Oct 27, 2023
Oct 27, 2023
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Oct 26, 2023
Studio Portraits with the Speed Graphic and Lomography Lomograflock
Oct 26, 2023
Oct 26, 2023
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Feb 28, 2023
Olympus Trip 35 & Elektra 100 25mm Film Review for Film Camera Store
Feb 28, 2023
Feb 28, 2023
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Feb 12, 2023
Choosing the 'right' film camera
Feb 12, 2023
Feb 12, 2023
Featured in Yorkshire Life Magazine - Event Photography for Slaithwaite Moonraking Festival
Feb 7, 2023
Featured in Yorkshire Life Magazine - Event Photography for Slaithwaite Moonraking Festival
Feb 7, 2023
Feb 7, 2023
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Feb 4, 2023
Featured in Silvergrain Classics Magazine!
Feb 4, 2023
Feb 4, 2023
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Jan 25, 2023
Pentax 67 and the Carl Zeiss Sonnar 180 2.8 - a match made in Heaven (or more specifically Poland)
Jan 25, 2023
Jan 25, 2023
Darkroom Printing Workshop
Jan 1, 2023
Darkroom Printing Workshop
Jan 1, 2023
Jan 1, 2023
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Dec 1, 2022
Let's Shoot Film
Dec 1, 2022
Dec 1, 2022
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Nov 2, 2022
Our first Shoot, Develop & Print Workshop
Nov 2, 2022
Nov 2, 2022
Shoot, Develop & Print - Workshops in our Darkroom
Nov 1, 2022
Shoot, Develop & Print - Workshops in our Darkroom
Nov 1, 2022
Nov 1, 2022
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Oct 21, 2022
lomograflok- shooting instax wide film on the speed graphic
Oct 21, 2022
Oct 21, 2022
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Sep 18, 2022
Something Old and Something New: Shooting Portraits with the Speed Graphic, Kodak Aero Ektar & Lomograflok instant film back
Sep 18, 2022
Sep 18, 2022
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May 6, 2022
More is More: Medium Format and 35mm Portraits on Black and white film
May 6, 2022
May 6, 2022
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Dec 30, 2021
Going for Gold!! Kodak Gold 200 Review
Dec 30, 2021
Dec 30, 2021
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Dec 23, 2021
Fomapan 400 Review - Street Portrait Shoot
Dec 23, 2021
Dec 23, 2021
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Oct 17, 2021
Helios 40-2N Review or Digital Photography: A Slight Return...
Oct 17, 2021
Oct 17, 2021
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Jun 14, 2021
NIkon L35 AF Review
Jun 14, 2021
Jun 14, 2021
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Jun 3, 2021
Can you dig it? Shooting Rollei Retro 80S with an Orange Filter
Jun 3, 2021
Jun 3, 2021
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May 31, 2021
Lomography Colour 100 medium format review
May 31, 2021
May 31, 2021
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May 18, 2021
Film Photography Workshops - Start your Adventure on Film!
May 18, 2021
May 18, 2021
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May 16, 2021
Lomography Lomochrome Purple Review
May 16, 2021
May 16, 2021
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Apr 11, 2021
Holga 120N - the all weather camera!
Apr 11, 2021
Apr 11, 2021
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Mar 12, 2021
New Topographics - finding the extraordinary in the every day world
Mar 12, 2021
Mar 12, 2021
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Feb 9, 2021
Writing a film photography blog
Feb 9, 2021
Feb 9, 2021
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Dec 17, 2020
Holga Portraits
Dec 17, 2020
Dec 17, 2020
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Nov 18, 2020
Lens Test: Portrait shoots comparing the Helios 44 to the Helios 44-2
Nov 18, 2020
Nov 18, 2020
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Nov 16, 2020
Nikon F3HP review or If at first you don't succeed buy another Nikon F3
Nov 16, 2020
Nov 16, 2020
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Aug 13, 2020
It's hip to be square: Kiev 88 / ARAX CM review
Aug 13, 2020
Aug 13, 2020

Going for Gold!! Kodak Gold 200 Review

December 30, 2021

A quick note before we begin: The majority of the text here was written back in August 2021 but the blog was languishing in the ‘draft’ folder since then and I’ve been so busy with other things that I am only now (December 2021) getting round to completing it!

There is no escaping the fact that film seems to be getting more expensive - price rises across the board from Fuji, Kodak and Ilford. This has prompted a bit of a rethink in terms of my ‘go to’ films. In fact it’s also driven me partially back into the arms of digital (the horror) but more of that another time…

I’ve spent a couple of years shooting almost nothing other than Portra 400 and I love how consistently awesome it is especially when it comes to shooting in low light. But recently I’ve refrained from shooting it in any other conditions - the price rises (and hey - more are on their way) mean Portra has become a specialty film stock for me, one which only gets used when I absolutely require that level of flexibility.

I’m a glass half full kinda guy so I’m viewing this as an opportunity to start looking at alternatives and as it turns out there are some amazing film stocks available at a lower price point which do brilliantly when you have lots of lovely light to play with! During what passed for summer here in the UK I took some of these films out for a spin!

In today’s blog we’ll be looking at Kodak Gold 200 which is a classic ‘consumer’ film that has been around in one form or another for a long time.If you bought 35mm Kodak film from the chemists in the 80’s/90’s there’s a fair chance it was this stuff that you bought! I’ve shot Kodak Gold a few times before - usually for street and travel stuff but I’d never used it on a portrait shoot until HERE. I was really pleased with how it turned out and keen to really get a feel for what it can do.

These photos were taken on a beautifully sun drenched late afternoon in the picturesque town of Saltaire with the wonderful Lauren who as well as channelling some retro 60s/70s vibes with her outfit also brought along her classic mini which she restored herself - when Lauren commits to a look, she goes all in!!

Kit wise as you can see in the inset picture I was using the Nikon F3 for 35mm duties - these shots were either on the 85mm 1.4 or 50mm 1.4 AIS lenses. I’ll share photos from the Pentax 67 in another blog at some point (in the next decade at this rate)!

I think the images can speak for themselves (but rest assured I’ll waffle on a bit about what I think too…)

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Yikes!! Contrast: Check. Tones: Check. Grain: Yummy, check! Detail: erm… Check. Not much to complain about here, I shot these at box speed 200 as I wanted to see how it looked and I am very happy!! The grain structure is very much present and personally I LOVE it! If you’re one of those ‘I don’t like grain people’ then get the fuck out of here… no sorry! I’m joking! come back! :)

The classic film look really suits the style and look for this shoot - I feel like we’re shooting the cover of vogue circa 1971 or some marketing materials for British Leyland!! (I think these are good things)!

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In this shot above we can see how the film (and the glass) handles backlit/direct sunlight which was just cresting the trees in the background - I really like playing around with positioning the light in my frame to affect contrast and tones, it gives a whole other look and is another part of why I love film - you can make your editing choices in the moment using the natural resources that you have to hand!

A huge thank you to Lauren for an amazing shoot! We couldn't have asked for better weather, a better location or a better film stock to suit this style.

In conclusion then - Kodak Gold 200 is fucking brilliant! If you have lots of golden sunlight then you can’t go wrong! I’m not sure how well it will push or handle under exposure but perhaps that’s a blog for another day!

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Tags: film photography, filmphoto, colourfilm, nikon, fashion photography, shoot, fashion, location shoot
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