-
Another one bites the dust. Fuji Film Imaging Systems, Inc. has officially announced the end of sales for Advanced Photo System (APS) films, production of which already stopped in July 2011. While it hasn't been a popular format for a while now, the news still brings an analogue frown to our faces.
-
Pocket sized fun: The Fuji Superia is a Pocketfilm also known as 110 format and It comes in a plastic cartridge!
-
Are you wondering if that disposable camera is worth keeping? The answer is yes! This tutorial shows you how to recover the film inside.
-
Fuji Velvia 50 ASA is one of the films that i've enjoyed using; It yielded different hues and great contrast when cross-processed. Read on!
-
Have you ever had a problem when you want to take a picture in low light? After I got this camera, La Sardina Camera & Flash – Fischers Fritze, my problem was solved! It's not just a sardine can for me, but one of my favorite cameras. Please come with me, with my long night and my La Sardina. Let's move like Jagger!
-
Looking for a good film to shoot with? Expired Fuji Superia ASA 100 can be the answer, especially when you run out of film throughout your holidays!
-
Today I will tell you about a rare film, hard to find in these parts and with some very good features. It is the Fujifilm RMS 100/1000. But what does it offer? Go on and read!
-
The Velvia I used seemed to behave differently - it was like having both colour negative and slide film!
-
It's not every day you walk into a photo lab with a small amount of cash and walk out with a lot more than you bargained for. For a mere £20 ($31.75) you can snap up 20 rolls of Fuji Reala 100 35mm 36 exp. That's extreme value for money, £1 ($1.58) per roll; that's something worth shouting about!
-
A while ago I ordered Fuji Velvia 50 RVP 35mm color slide film because I liked the idea of getting very fine grained pictures it promises to deliver. It is a slow speed film that, if treated with xpro, features slight to medium versatile color shifts and very saturated colors. Compared to the Velvia ISO 100's typical red and purplish hues, cross-processing the Velvia ISO 50 brings you more subtle but still distinctive results. It's not the best choice for night photography. Now, the colors that it brings is what I like about it.
-
Fuji Velvia is probably one of the most versatile film that i've ever used. I've only tried an expired Velvia so far and it yielded great results!
-
A Fuji Instax Mini 10 camera, found amongst tools and other junk at a car boot sale has turn into one of my favourite cameras, it really is a secondhand love affair!
-
See what you can do with your Holga when you DON'T use the 12 or 16 mask. It's naked, leaky, and overlapping fun. I have been using my Holga without either the 12 or 16 frame mask and have been getting some really nice results. I love the exaggerated vignetting and light leaks that occurred on every picture. These pictures all came from The Art of Waiting roll from September 2010, shot on Fuji Velvia.
-
Thrift store cameras are always fun. The cheap plastic things are great for modifying and customizing. Sometimes you get extra lucky and find traces of the previous owner, like I did when I bought a Fuji DL-160 Tele, including a roll of expired Kruidvat 200 film.
-
Mix a roll of Fuji Provia 100F daylight color reversal 35mm film with cross processing and call your dish greenscale film! That's what I got when I tried it out -- a torrent of green!
-
Coming from a non-art background can be tough on a amateur photographer, trying to break into the photography scene. So, I thought I should prepare a portfolio to show what I have in mind, not only to show clients but also to see for myself where I'm headed towards. With some inspiration, I started work on my first series.
-
In my quest to find films everybody forgot about, I found the ALFO Professional Slide Film. Never really heard about that one, so I started my CSI engine. So this review is rather about the way one researches about the history of gone film-gems than the look of its emulsion.
-
There is a new landlord for Singapore's Turf City shopping mall and nobody really knows what's going to happen to this place after February 2012. So before it gets razed to the ground, I decided to pay a visit to the former turf club, where horses once raced against each other for our entertainment.
-
Head out into the streets on a sunny day and try shooting with Fujichrome T64, then have it cross-processed. You will see your world as you've never seen it before!
-
After the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami that occurred in Japan last year, in April 2011 Fujifilm launched the Photo Rescue Project to clean photos and albums damaged with seawater and mud in disaster-affected areas. The rescued photographs are now being cleaned and filed by volunteers in Ofunato, in the Iwate Prefecture.