Olympus Trip 35 & Elektra 100 25mm Film Review for Film Camera Store

 

Blogging has been a wonderful way to share my passion for film photography - on occasion I get contacted by brands or companies who want me to write a blog for them - usually these brands have almost nothing to do with film photography or are just totally random products so I tend to say no. But recently I was contacted by The Film Camera Store who asked me if they could send me some film and some film cameras to review - HECK YES was my response and this here blog represents the first of three reviews that I’ll be writing. Yay!

First up we have the Olympus Trip 35 - I’ve not tried one of these before although I did have it’s cousin the Olympus 35RC which I reviewed HERE it was a great camera especially for travel.

The Trip 35 is reminiscent of the 35RC although more automated / less control for the photographer which I think speak to it’s original purpose as an ideal travel camera (and yeah the name trip is a bit of a giveaway too). For example it’s a zone focus system - you set the lens to one of four distance settings (see pic below) rather than focusing it yourself, therefore the viewfinder isn’t coupled to the lens.

You can shoot in aperture priority mode by choosing the aperture yourself or you can set the camera to A which is fully auto. ISO is selected via a ring around the lens.

I’ve recently decided to make more time for photowalks and just shoot whatever happens to catch my attention so let’s see where the little Olympus Trip takes me. I’ll be shooting a roll of Flic Film Elektra 100 film which has also been supplied by Film Camera Store. I hadn’t heard of this stock before, a bit of internet research shows me that this is respooled Kodak Aerochrome IV film which is used for aerial photography, documenting landscapes and surveillance (eeek).

I loaded the camera and went on a walk along the canal that runs through Slaithwaite where I live…

The film cassette advised to load the film in low light due to it’s sensitivity and as a very thin film base it can be prone to light leaks on the first few frames but I seem to have avoided this - the negatives did look VERY thin once developed so I was interested to see how they came out - I scanned the negatives on the Epson V600 and processed the scans with the Negative Lab Pro plug in for Lightroom. I gave the images a little tweak here and there - mainly just adding a bit of warmth as the initial scans felt a bit cool (as in cold… you know what I mean)!

The film is interesting, I like the tones - it’s got some pleasing contrast. It is sharp and quite smooth although shadow areas have more noticeable grain which isn’t unpleasant - reminds me of Kodak Gold in that regard. It doesn’t seem to hang on to highlights all that well and can feel a little washed out, it was VERY bright sunshine so that maybe the Zuiko lens as much as the lens.

I shot the camera in auto mode and let it decide on the settings - it does have the ability to be shot in semi automatic / aperture priority mode too.

The lens and the film have done a pretty good job here - with strong sunlight washing across the scene and some lovely rays of light captured, there’s a slight drop in contrast as you’d expect but not much, I think the camera did a good job of metering the scene to get a good exposure too.

One of the tricky things with zone focus is not knowing exactly where your plane of focus is, which means there’s a little bit of trial and error involved - if I was to keep this camera I would definitley look up what exact distance the focussing indicators are set to and event take a tape measure out to check when shooting, but for these I just winged it - in the shot above I kind of missed focus.

In recent years people have been clearing the overgrown banks of the canal and carving out places to live - generally consisting of an assortment of barges, caravans, trucks and shelters. There is a definite pioneer / frontier vibe going on (Wild Wild West Yorkshire).

In bright sunlight the film is very clean and has a pleasing tonality if as mentioned previously a little washed out, I gave some of these images a little contrast boost in processing.

So there we have it - I really enjoyed shooting this Flic Film Elektra 100 with the Olympus Trip - it felt good to get out and just snap away - it makes a nice change of pace to just point and shoot!

If you’d like to try this set up for yourself then you can check out Film Camera Store and get an Olympus Trip 35 right HERE and a roll of Flic Film right HERE

Big thanks to Film Camera Store for lending me the Trip 35 and a roll of film to burn! I have another camera/film review I’ve done for them coming soon!

Featured in Silvergrain Classics Magazine!

It’s a sign of just how bonkers hectic things have been that I am only now sitting down to share that I was invited to write an article for Silvergrain Classics Magazine!!

It features some of the community based work that I do via Our Creative Connection you can visit HERE for more details of that in general.

It was wonderful to be invited by Silvergrain Classics magazine to share a project I was involved with last summer with TSL Kirklees’ Migration Team running Cyanotype Printing workshops with refugees and asylum seekers 💙
My work life can be a bit compartmentalised - but I have been working to bring the different strands together. Just in case you were wondering everything is done under the banner of Our Creative Connection the Social Enterprise that I founded in 2021. All of the commercial, portraits and event work and all of the darkroom and film photography workshops - they are all trading activities that support the social aims and objectives of Our Creative Connection which if you’re wondering what they are can be seen HERE.

Participatory photography doesn’t have to mean taking photos with cameras - I love the accessible nature of hands on traditional photographic techniques like Cyanotype, very simple to learn and lots of fun!

It’s a real kick to see this in print - huge thank you to everyone involved in the project and to Silvergrain Classics for the opportunity to share it with a wider audience.

Darkroom Printing Workshop

From basic darkroom skills for first time printers, to more advanced processes for seasoned practitioners the Darkroom Printing Workshop is the perfect way to make the most of your black and white film negatives and let them fulfil their photographic potential by making a proper Darkroom print!

I’ll guide you through each stage of the process from evaluating your negatives and choosing which one to print, how to use a photographic enlarger, making test strips and how develop and fix your final print.

Please bring your own developed black & white negatives in either 35mm or 120 formats and I’ll supply the photographic paper & chemicals.

The Darkroom Printing workshop lasts 3 hours and costs £75 per person either as a 1to1 or for a small group of up to 3 people.

Dates and times will be arranged with participants.

To book a workshop please email info@chrischinnockphotography.com or complete the form below.

Let's Shoot Film

This workshop will get you up and running when it comes to shooting with film - we’ll look at the different types of film stocks and how they affect your final image, the basics of making a good exposure, metering light, composition and all the other aspects of using a film camera.

Whatever your photographic interests - portraiture, landscape, still life or street photography - we’ll shoot a roll of film together before developing it in the darkroom and digitising your negatives too.

Film cameras are available for you to use including 35mm and 120 film formats or you are welcome to bring your own. The workshop includes the cost of film & chemicals.

The ‘Lets shoot film’ workshop lasts 3 hours and costs £75 per person either as a 1to1 or for a small group of up to 3 people.

Dates and times will be arranged with participants.

To book a workshop please email info@chrischinnockphotography.com or complete the form below.

Our first Shoot, Develop & Print Workshop

 

As I write these words it’s been a couple of weeks since our first ever workshop at the Adventures on Film Darkroom and I am STILL buzzing from the experience!

Three people took part in this workshop - all of whom had shot with film in the past but were looking to get back into it, brush up on their skills and learn some new ones too.

The format for the day was a location based portrait shoot with our wonderful model and long time creative collaborator Danni, after which we then went into the Darkroom to develop our film and create some prints.

You’ll have no doubt noticed the preponderance of video in this blog - yes friends I’ve recently rejoined Instagram after a long hiatus - I have been enjoying creating some video reels of our workshop shenanigans! Give us a follow HERE

A lot of work went in to getting the darkroom ready to welcome our first guests and we had a wonderful day together shooting portraits, developing the film and making some prints.

A huge thank you to Gary, Andrew and Damian for taking part and of course to Danni for being such an amazing model and to Jony Hunter for shooting the video and BTS shots of the day!

We’re going to be organising some regular workshops beginning in the new year covering so watch this space for details and if you’re interested in taking part then please see HERE for more details or get in touch via email info@chrischinnockphotography.com

Shoot, Develop & Print - Workshops in our Darkroom

This workshop covers the three main stages of shooting, developing and finally printing an image from film. We’ll look at how to get the best exposure from your negative, how to evaluate which negative to print and methods to create the best possible print from your film.

Whatever your photographic interests - portraiture, landscape, still life or street photography - you’ll learn how to create stunning images on black and white film.

You’ll then develop your film by hand before learning how to make a darkroom print of your work.

You will also receive digital scans of all your film shots.

Film cameras are available for you to use including 35mm and 120 film formats or you are welcome to bring your own. The workshop includes the cost of film, chemicals & paper.

The Shoot - Develop - Print workshop lasts 3 hours and costs £75 per person either as a 1to1 or for a small group of up to 3 people.

Dates and times will be arranged with participants.

To book a workshop please email info@chrischinnockphotography.com or complete the form below.

More is More: Medium Format and 35mm Portraits on Black and white film: Part 1

There is a school of thought which advocates only shooting one camera and one lens in order to fully focus on your creative process which in the case of portraiture is about connecting with your subject. I have subscribed to this view for a long time - minimise your kit and maximise your attention on being present rather than spending time deciding which lens/camera to use next. Makes good sense and it absolutely works!

But during COVID as the restrictions meant that opportunities to shoot became fewer and farther between ( I also realised just how important to my mental health shooting is) my mindset shifted towards one of ‘this might be the only shoot I have for X months, why not bring some more stuff’.

I’m not here to tell you what you should or shouldn’t be doing because this is all down to personal preference - for me (for now) I’m adopting the ‘more is more’ approach. Like any new practice I went overboard at first and brought too much stuff which did kind of get in my way but now I feel I’ve found a balance that works for me.

So let’s get down to business shall we? I’ve decided to split this into a two part series of blog posts about the same shoot (this is all about maximising right)? The shoot in question took place recently with a wonderful model Fae Rose someone I haven’t shot with before but absolutely will be working with again! Thank you Fae!

First up we’ve got some images from the ARAX CM using the stunning Carl Zeiss Jen Sonnar 180mm 2.8 lens.

Yikes this lens is so sharp!! Skin glows and backgrounds melt into a creamy dreamy blur. yum! I reckon this is the best portrait lens EVER made! It’s only downside is it’s size / weight - its a bit of a beast and it’s certainly not one for people who like to go unnoticed… people will think your toting a rocket launcher carrying this thing around! KABOOM!

A few words about the film stock too - I have a few rolls of Fuji Acros 100 on ice which I picked up very cheaply, WOW! I am only really now appreciating this film, its beautiful stuff… I’ll be searching out more and also checking out the new version too!

And now some 35mm shots from the Nikon F3 with the Nikkor 50mm 1.2 loaded with Rollei Retro 80S.

Yikes again!! Loving the results on 35mm film too - I only recently got the 50mm 1.2 and it is a stunner! I’ve shot Rollei Retro 80S before and again it does not disappoint - it has a very crisp, punchy contrasty look which is unique.

I am over the moon with how shots from both cameras came out - it’s given me two quite different look and feel with the different formats, social lengths and film stocks.

Ironically I decided not to swap lenses on either camera on this shoot (but I was glad to have the option to do so)

So what the heck was all that about then? Well, on one level I think it’s purely about 'what the hell is the point in owning all this stuff if you’re not shooting with it’ and on another level it’s about the final vision - offering different creative possibilities.

I am not advocating just taking LOADS of camera gear, throwing the kitchen sink at your concept and seeing what happens, I am however suggesting that if you put some thought into your shoots upfront you can select some kit that will help you realise your vision.

In part 2 of this series I’ll share two more sets of images from two different film stocks on this same shoot!

By Jupiter! Portrait shoot on ADOX Color Mission 200 film


What a time to be alive! A BRAND NEW film stock just released by ADOX called Color Mission 200. I was very fortunate to be able to grab two rolls via someone on a fb group I’m part of who had the great foresight to buy a whole stack of these and then sell them on at cost price to fellow film addicts! Thank you kind sir! Without your quick thinking (and bulk purchasing) I’d have missed out on this film stock - which if you can’t be bothered to read any further I flipping LOVE! What a surprise - a film stock that he loves, shock horror, stop press etc etc.

It’s been a while since I blogged as I’ve been super busy with other things but I’ve got a ton of stuff to share with you all and what better way to kick things off than taking ADOX Color Mission 200 film for a spin. A big thank you to Danni for modelling on this shoot - it’s always great fun shooting together!

A few words about the kit before diving into the images - I’ve been shooting loads with my Nikon F2 recently so I decided it was high time that my Pentax Spotmatic F come out to play. I took my ARAX CM along too but that’s a blog for another day!

The Spotmatic is such a great camera- I highly recommend them to anyone looking for a reasonably priced and solidly built M42 camera. Lenswise it was an all Jupiter affair (see what I did with the title eh? By Jupiter I said….By Jupiter…oh forget it).

I only took the silver spotmatic F on the shoot but you can see the lenses mounted side by side below - the Jupiter 9 is really compact almost the size of a 50mm and the 135 is likewise quite a compact design.

Spot the multi coated lens or what?!! :)

The Jupiter 9 85mm f2 is a lens which I’ve owned for a while now but only shot with once (as it happens on another shoot with Danni HERE) I also took along a brand new to me Jupiter 11 135mm f4. I’ll share the images in the order I shot them - Jupiter 9 first then the Jupiter 11.

I was really keen to shoot the Jupiter 9 wide open at f2 - not something I often do TBH, but with these old soviet lenses that’s often where there unique characteristics are most pronounced.

I love the dreamy glow that the Jupiter 9 creates in the shot above, it’s the single coated version and handled the backlighting really well (always use a lens hood peeps)!

Love the wide open soft dreamy effect of this lens! Well chat about the film at the end but so far so great I reckon! Now let’s take a look at some of the Jupiter 11 shots.

I really love the Jupiter 11 too - it’s an f4 max aperture and I shot this wide open too. Being an f4 lens gives you enough depth of field to ensure a sharp portrait and look at those blurry backgrounds too - lovely!

OK so let’s take a totally subjective and unscientific approach to thinking about the film: my first flush response was that it really reminds me of Kodak Pro Image 100 which I’ve shot before with Danni (again) a couple of years ago HERE I think the texture and tonality are very similar, colour wise ADOX tends a little more towards the red where as Pro Image is more towards green so that’s something to keep in mind.

This shoot had lots and lots of natural sunlight as you can see - I love the contrast and just overall feel of the images, really lovely stuff. Part of me would be tempted to over expose my next roll (yes I have another) at 100 and see how it performs but I like the punchy colours and contrast of this roll so much that I’m not sure, maybe I’ll just shoot it at 200.

Big thanks to Exposure Film Lab my go to people for colour film dev and scanning!

This film has bags of character and a lovely classic feel to it - absolutely love the results and it’s so exciting to see a brand new film coming to market! Well done to the folks at ADOX!

Fomapan 400 Review - Street Portrait Shoot

 
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Back again after a little break - life has been WAAAAY too busy of late! In a good way though so I have no complaints, except that my blog has had to take the back seat for which I apologise! I have been managing to get a few shoots in though and I’ve been trying out a bunch of new (to me) film stocks - prompted in no small part because of financial considerations, but also because, well… there are still loads of film stocks out there to shoot so why not take them for a spin?! Today we’ll be looking at Fomapan 400 in medium format.

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I am no stranger to Fomapan film having shot quite a lot of 200 HERE and I figured it was high time that I took their faster speed 400 film for a spin and it did not dissapoint! After a bit of research online I decided to rate the film at 200 and I love the results!!

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I really enjoyed shooting with KC on this one as we had a walk around Bradford City Centre making the most of the urban landscape. Fomapan 400 in medium format gives lovely clean and crisp results - I’d be interested to se how it performs in 35mm, i suspect a bit more gritty / grainy which would be no bad thing!

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I really like the tonality and texture of this film, shot in good light and over exposed two stops is certainly a good starting point, I think I’d like to experiment with shooting at box speed too as I feel it might add some more charachter / contrast.

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I love shooting with the Pentax 67 - it’s a wonderful camera, so easy to shoot with and with the 105mm Takumar lens mounted it’s pretty much perfect! Dreamy and creamy bokeh and razor sharp where you want it, this lens gets a lot of HYPE but I think it’s well deserved, my only gripe with the P67 is that some idiot (me) dropped it a couple of years back and it needed to be repaired but ever since it’s not been the same and I’ll often lose a frame or two from a roll as they overlap, not good when you only have ten shots per roll to start with! And it is almost always some of the better shots which end up being ruined - as in this case :(

I’ll have to send it off for another repair I think, but at least we got some more good shots! Really enjoyed this shoot and it felt good to try out a new and relatively cheap film, prices are going up and up so Fomapan is really viable option for me

In this final shot we snuck into the National Film Museum and I grabbed this reflection shot of KC - I was surprised at how well it came out since I think I metered the scene as 400 and then held my nerve with the Pentax 67 at about 1/30 of a second at f2.4 - lots of punchy contrast in this due to under exposure, I like!

Helios 40-2N Review or Digital Photography: A Slight Return...

 
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I don’t know about you but I’ve found myself struggling for inspiration lately, not feeling motivated to get out and shoot - in part because I have been SUPER busy starting a new business AND a new job but also just generally not feeling ‘IT’. Have you been feeling that way too? I know many of my friends have - I mean look at the world around us right now, it’s been one heck of an 18 months hasn’t it? I’ve often found that inspiration/creativity/the muse has ebbed and flowed like the tide - one thing I’ve learned is that you have to work for inspiration. It’s no good sitting around waiting for creativity to strike KABOOM! It doesnt work that way - you have to change it up, try something new, or try something old, whatever… just try… to whit: this latest blog.

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I have to thank my friend Sophie for giving me the much needed creative kick up the backside to just get out and shoot - and since I was feeling in a mood to change it up I decided to take a DIGITAL camera with me!! GASP! SHOCK! HORROR!! please keep reading though… don’t run away! :D I have in my posession a Nikon D700 camera which I’ve just bought for a commercial project and I figured what the heck - why not shoot some digital as a way of changing things up. It’s been a good few years now since I sold all digital gear and pledged allegiance to the gods of FILM but let’s not beat about the bush film is getting EXPENSIVE now especially in these uncertain times so expect to see some more digital offerings here…. but fear not I haven’t abandoned film all together! I shot a couple of rolls of medium format and they are off at the lab being developed as I type these words to you - I guess I’m saying I’m going back to shooting both digital and film.

Its not just economic reasons, I’ve kind of been feeling a little bit restricted by the self applied ‘I only shoot film’ and I want to make sure that I’m not missing out on something creatively by cutting myself off from digital photography - so it’s coming back into my practice. HOWEVER. There’s no denying that I do find digital images a bit too ‘clean’ if you know what I mean so I’m very interested in combining digital with vintage lenses to add some character - and this brings me FINALLY around to introduce todays offering: The Helios 40-2N. I’ve written about it before HERE sharing some shots from a film only portrait shoot.

It’s a tricky lens to handle because its quite heavy, it has a pre-set aperture control and being an f1.5 lens if you want to shoot wide open that is some thing DOF you are dealing with, also did I mention that it’s quite heavy….BUT I absolutely adore what this beast of a lens does with light…. it can be contrasty, super sharp and crispwith really punchy colours or if you shoot with a light source in your frame suddenly you get blurry, glowy, dreamy low contrast images instead.

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The Helios 40-2N is an old Soviet design which is often only talked about for one thing: Swirly Bokeh and it sure does do that but I think this lens has much more to offer the thoughtful photographer than swirly bokeh - it is definitely NOT a one trick pony! Its manual focus of course despite being a native F Mount lens and this definitely suits me anyway, I can’t shake the feeling that AF is just cheating :D nothing slows you down more than trying to manually focus a lens at f1.5!

I am hugely grateful to Sophie for a lovely portrait shoot and for giving me the opportunity to get creative again! Anyway enough ramble from me - suffice it to say that I am really enjoying shooting a mix of film and digital and I guess that’s all that matters right?

Helios Dreams - Shooting Portraits with the Helios 40-2N

 

There really aren’t that many lenses left on my “flipping heck I really really really want to own that” list - I am fortunate to have owned / sold on some pretty amazing glass in my time! That being said there is one that I have finally managed to tick off the list - the Helios 40-2! I’ve had one in my sights for a few years now - just casually waiting for the opportunity to bag it at a price that made sense - and that time has arrived my friends! Behold the Helios 40-2N 85mm 1.5!

You will probably have heard about the Helios 44 series of lenses, they are small, cheap and plentiful - easy to obtain and every photographer should own (at least) one! I’ve written about these sovet era lenses previously HERE and HERE But the Helios 40-2? This is a different beast all together! It’s big, heavy, relatively rare and unless you get very lucky they can be quite expensive too.

The eagle eyed among you will note that it is mounted on to my Nikon F2 - that’s right, this ‘N’ in the name Helios 40-2N stands for Nikon - although strangely enough it won’t quite make infinity focus…. I haven’t seen any othe reviews mention this but it definitely doesn’t focus to infinity, nearly but not quite. The good news is that this first and foremost a portrait lens and in that role it’s not often you’ll want infinity focus, but even still. Anyway with that minor gripe out of the way let’s dive into some lens geekery shall we?

I could quite easily write a whole blog post about the history of post world war two lens design and manufacture in the USSR and fellow eastern bloc/satellite country the DDR (but I won’t)!

Suffice it to say that this lens is based on a 1930’s German Carl Zeiss design and then WWII happened and long story short it didn’t end well for Germany in lots of ways, one of which was having large swathes of their industrial and technological knowledge taken as reparations - optics and lens design being one these technologies. And so not long after that the Soviets started churning out lenses that were strangely similar to those 1930’s German designs…. any who…enough with the history lesson because while there is certainly a long heritage to this lens’ design, my version is actually my most modern lens (by quite some margin) using the serial number to date it this Zenit Helios 40-2N was built in 2016! Yep that’s right - they still make them in Russia to this very day! This late version has a redesigned housing (and IMHO a more user friendly lay out) than the older versions - its also cheaper to buy than the classic versions.

Some folks like to shoot the older style perhaps because this has an aesthetic appeal or it complements their other camera gear, but me I’m a shooter first and foremost and I love this more modern looking lens, not just that but the handling is very good, the focus ring is smooth as silk - some of those older versions are more than 50 years old so it’s a bit of pot luck whether you’ll have a nice smooth focussing action after all that time!

The Helios 40-2 is well known for creating wonderfully swirly bokeh and heck yeah - it certainly does do that well, but it’s more than a one trick pony, I think there are several stand out features which make this lens a must for your camera bag.

I took it for a spin on a portrait shoot with the lovely Danni and the Nikon F2 - I shot two rolls of 35mm film that these first images are from a roll of expired Konica Pro 160 which I have to say I like VERY much, it being expired at least 10 years ago I gave it an extra bit of light and rated it as 100. In an unusual move for me I tried my best to shoot all of these wide open at 1.5 or very occasionally stopped down to f2 - reasons for this are that those wider apertures play to the dreamy charachteristics of this lens and I wanted to make the most of them.

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The image above was the very last frame on the roll and it’s probably my favourite of the whole shoot! Shooting wide open - especially with a manual focus camera like the F2 presents a challenge and even though the depth of field isn’t quite even across both of Danni’s eyes - I actually don’t care! I am coming more and more to the idea that critical sharpness is not that important when it comes to overall image quality, and yet some folks obsess over it! I’m much more into the overall look and feel of an image, what kind of textures are at play - you can see that the Helios 40-2 is capable of critical sharpness but as with many great portrait lenses it isn’t so sharp as to be unflattering. Things dissolve into a lovely dreamy mush out towards the edge of the frame - again this is perfect for framing your subject in the centre and giving them a little more POP!

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The trees lined up in the distance caught my eye for this composition and I really love how this shot came out - the out of focus areas have a painterly feel, plants in the bottom right corner doing that melty/dreamy thing again and there’s a bit of refined swirl going on in the background. I’ve read that you need to have the correct distance between you, your subject and the background to really make the swirls appear - I’ll definitely be trying it out again next time!

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Again more melty/dreamy bokeh and a hint of the swirly stuff in the background - there’s some motion blur and a bit of glow around Danni framed in the centre which is another nice effect of this lens, some people might say that these features of the lens are weaknesses but to me this is all part of the point. The Helios 40-2 is like an art lens - sure when you photograph test charts wide open it’s not the best performer but where’s the fun in that? I love how the lens resolves light!

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Now let’s take a look at some of my faves from the 2nd roll, this was Kodak Gold 200 - technically expired but it’s been on ice since fresh - I shot these at 100 too as I find Kodak Gold really does respond well to a bit of over exposure.

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Dreamy dreamy dreamy dreamy…. love it!! I would have loved to have nailed critical focus on Danni’s eyes for the shot above but that’s the joy of film over digital innit! No instant replay - you just gotta do your best to nail it right there and then! I still really like this shot - you can get pretty close up with the Helios!

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These two shots are among my faves too - I love the tones and the grain, that melty/dreamy background is doing it’s thing again and on these two occasions I even managed good focus on Danni’s eyes - whatever next?!

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I like the overall look and feel of the shot below although I’d have liked (and was aiming for) good focus but it wasn’t to be….I’m including it here to demonstrate a couple of things, first: look at those bokeh balls of light in the background! Yum! Secondly: This was shooting pretty much directly into the light - the lens handled it with aplomb! Another reason in my view to go for the more modern lens as it has modern coating

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Is this lens technically perfect? No. Is it the sharper than a really sharp thing? No. Do I love it anyway? YES! One of the many things I love about shooting film is that so many of your creative decisions are made up front - choice of film, lens and then of course exposure, composition and use of light, you have to commit to that moment and work with what you have at hand. Digital invites you to spend more time after the fact bringing your creative vision to life - and sitting at a the computer moving sliders around in lightroom just isn’t my idea of fun! I’ve said this before many times in these blog posts but it bares repeating as this lens really does illustrate the point - the Helios 40-2 is a creative tool, it can add a dash of dreamy, swirly, melty goodness to your shoot and that my friends is worth the price of entry!