-
Personally I am a huge fan of redscaling. It allows you to get some color in your photos, even on the grayest of days. But what if you just want to add the redscale effect to just some of your photos rather than shooting an entire roll this way? Easy enough: use a red filter! And while you're at it, why not throw in some other colors as well?! Read on to find out how you can turn your LC-A+ in to a rainbow camera!
-
Once I laid eyes on that offer on eBay I was instantly stunned. There was a slide film of Ilford. The British film producer came out with their own branded color transparencies? I made sure to win the bunch and tried the Ilford Dia 200 myself. One of the reasons I liked it is because it used the German name for slidefilm: Dia.
-
When you need a break after long months of work or studying, it's always a good idea to go surfing. Surfing clears your mind, it relaxes your body and soul.
-
It's April and yesterday it was still snowing here. Yes, really. I don't even live on the North Pole. It was snowing here, in Slovenia, in the middle of Europe, in times when spring should already be in full bloom.
-
This blue-toned, high saturation, fine grained slide film is normally used to duplicate slides using a slide duplicator instead of a lens. You can also use it to shoot with any camera as long as you adapt to its very low sensitivity.
-
It’s the original encounters, which unfolds the most energy and evokes the strongest feelings! There's nothing quite like finding a film that has its own secrets and leaves you guessing. Such is the Kodak Vericolor Slide Film, a sensation in blue and black.
-
I bought a filter set with lots of different colors a time ago. Mainly for a flash and the gray for a neutral density filter. But now I use a couple of different colors to hold in front of the lens.
-
Maybe there’s only a technical reason behind this “perfect combination,” or maybe also that romantic feeling about matching a very old camera with an inverted layers of film, that gives the redscale effect. In any case, some of the best pictures I took are born from this marriage: my 1986 classic LC-A and the Lomography Redscale XR 50-200 film.
-
This was my first time I used the Agfa Ct Precisa film on my Lomography Sprocket Rocket Camera. I took the pictures on a sunny winter day.
-
Fritz, as I call him, is my ever dependable light companion. Wherever I go, I always make sure I bring one flash with me, so I wont feel bad that it took me until night time to shoot, or whenever the subjects I want to take be inside a dim- lighted room. Like the famous tagline of a deodorant, I'm sure Fritz wont let err light you down!
-
This year we visited the same country and city twice. Where is this city? It’s none other than Bangkok, Thailand.
-
In 2010 the last commercial lab processing Kodak Kodachrome films was closed. Since then you have to be creative to get this film developed. This tipster will show you how to process Kodak Kodachrome on your own to get some beautiful, monochromatic, and blueish results!
-
Cyanotype is, as you may have already guessed it, a photographic printing process that results in a cyan-blue print. It's really quite easy to do them yourself at home as well. Read on to see what this process is all about!
-
Embracing the unexpected: I let my free trial of scanner software auto-correct my redscale shots of the Biltmore Estate in Asheville, North Carolina.
-
The last weekend I had slept in so many places I could not remember all of them...It was possible to sleep all the way to Tioman: blue chairs at the jetty. In the ferry. In the taxi. And finally, in a hammock by the beach, ooh lala!
-
Fine sand, deep blue waters, and gorgeous sunny days - all make up the description of Sherwoods Beach, in Waimanalo, Hawaii. Can you imagine relaxing on cloud-like, fluffy sand, as the shoreline gently breaks in a melodic rhythm, singing you to sleep?
-
One of the most amazing places you could photograph is surely the beach. I think you can have some great result with a various different kinds of films: the important thing is using a color film, in order to enjoy the huge amount of light and the opportunity to shoot some very colored panorama, which only seaside can offer.
-
A perfect place to relax, enjoy the vast scenery, and...have a Lomo photoshoot!
-
Living on an island has its many pluses - this includes the plethora of beaches to explore. Sometimes this allows us to stumble upon secret beaches, locations that aren't known by many. So take a look and get to know my favorite North Shore secret beach!
-
Lomography is about colors, isn't it? We all love photos with high contrasting colors like popping red, blue, yellow, green, and etc. Then, most of us think that to get this kind of photos, we need xpro (cross process) to achieve it. I thought so too at the beginning when i just started lomography. But today I am going to show you guys how to get high contrasting photos with negative films instead of slide films!