You have to tape it to avoid leaks. In cloudy day you must use flash and change the aperture. Try kodak gold 200 and bulb at night, you wont regret it 😊. Nice B&W shots although.
@@Brandongorriedraining? the same you would do to other camera in bulb with 8 f or 11 f aperture. I use my lightmeter app + reciprocity film app to get the time to exposure. Is for analogical lovers, otherwise you always have your Iphone ;-).
Your B&W shots came out so good! I wonder why yours worked so much better than Kevin's. He has so many light leaks and the light ruined so many of his B&W shots. Maybe it is the camera or maybe it was the film???? WHat do you think?
"Hey, Katharine...can I take ya pick-cha". You are too funny, Brandon. You have improved since your first post (Olympus af10....with the bad language). But yeah, this was interesting and funny, all at the same time. Before I go, the frame lines on the Olympus af10 - if you take the image, that exceeds The frame lines, does it cut the image out. How literal are the frame lines - or are they just a rough guideline? Out😊
Hey what's up dude, I never took the time to check the AF-10 barriers, but I always shot as if the frame cutoff was at the inner rectangle and they've always come out accurately for me :)
These shots are great. But why would you bother fixing things in Photoshop? I mean, it is what it is - a cheap, plastic camera that is quite unique. Embrace it's limitations. 🙂
For me, shooting with a Holga is a waste of a good roll of film. The only time I use a Holga is when it will do something my real medium format cameras cannot do. For example, take 6x12cm panoramic images and/or capture pinhole images. Note: October 1-7 is Holga Week.
That's a good point, however, I might add that the impression of the subject in a lower fidelity might add to a composition when the perfection of a studio 6x7 might cut through too harshly.
@@Brandongorrie I uderstand what you are saying and I agree with what you are saying. However, based on my shooting style and my taste, I know that when I want high image fidelity, I rely on expensive medium format and large format film to deliver. When I do not need high image fidelity, I prefer shooting inexpensive 35mm film or inexpensive digital images.