In my last post I showed you the film from the Diana Mini, in this post I wanted to show you a few favorites from my most recent roll from the Canon AE-1 Program camera. I’m loving this camera…it’s super sharp! I’m just sort of using it as a point and shoot right now…it has an ‘auto’ setting where it chooses the fstop and shutter speed for you, all you have to do is manually focus. I do want to get this baby out of auto mode and shoot some more soon! Mainly I was keeping it in ‘auto’ mode to make sure it worked ok. Now that I know it takes some great sharp photos, I want to really put it through it’s paces!
Non of these images have had anything done to them other than being resized for the web and adding my watermark (‘desaturate’ was also used in photoshop to remove any green casts to the images due to the processing by taking it to a drugstore type place.)




I got my second roll from the Diana Mini developed yesterday. MUCH better than the first roll (where I wasn’t paying attention and left it in bulb mode). What a fun little camera! I just love it! I already have it loaded with another roll, but I’m going to try the half frame setting next (instead of square). I wanted to share some of the shots with you….



Accidental double exposure but I like it!




Skunk Ape Research Center in Ochopee, FL…yes, I’m serious. We’ve only ever gone into the gift shop, lol.

I do know this is a double exposure, what I don’t know is why it’s rectangular and not square.

If you’re like me and read several photography blogs, you’ll know film is making a comeback. Many professional photographers who have been shooting digital are now professing their love for film. They’re shooting clients in digital AND film. It’s funny how things come around…fashion, music, etc. It’s popular, it’s not popular, it’s popular again. Film of course, was the ONLY thing available for years. I shot film, it’s how I learned. I started with the Canon FT QL, then upgraded to the Canon EOS ElanII. But, once digital came out I jumped on it. For a young kid into photography way back then, it was expensive. I’d muck out horse stalls, mow lawns, and other jobs to make money to #1 feed my horse, #2 develop/buy film and (as I got older) #3 pay for the insurance/gas on my car. The digital photography age made it all easier, and much cheaper! Looking back on it, I learned the most with the film cameras when it came to ISO, shutter speeds and fstops…but digital really helped me get better faster! There’s a place in my heart for film AND digital…there always will be.
I need to sit down and figure out what type of scanner I want to buy. It needs to be able to scan negatives and slides. Not only do I want to archive all of my old photographs onto DVD (and any current ones I take with the film camera collection I’m slowly building), but I want to be able to archive all of my parents’ images and slides on DVD. Is there a scanner any of you blog readers recommend?
And, I’ll leave you with a couple film photos….older ones I had scanned in the past with an older scanner that I no longer have…

Guess I was doing sunflares before I knew they were cool! LOL
Anyone remember the old Kodak Advantix cameras? I had one and thought it was just the coolest thing, lol. I loved the panoramic shots it took!

From some of my past blog posts, you now know I’m getting into collecting film cameras.
When I first started out taking pictures as a kid, I used an all manual Canon camera. And I got pretty darn good with that thing, where most of the prints I got back were just as I wanted them. But, then digital came out and I jumped at the Canon Digital Rebel (300D) and haven’t looked back at film since….
Until I started collecting these cameras…..now I have the film bug.
I bought a 35mm Canon AE-1 Program camera off of Ebay that came with the FD 50mm 1.8 lens…..and I decided to run some film through it to see if it worked. I just did some landscape type shots, set the camera on the auto mode (well, as ‘auto’ as a manual camera can be) and then took the film to Walgreens. I made sure I bought black and white film that Walgreens can develop…the C-41 (BW400CN to be exact). Well, the prints came back….some are green tinted, some are brown tinted and not a single one of them was actually black and white.
Other than the color issue (which I now believe is Walgreen’s fault), the images are nice and sharp and I know that the camera works perfectly. I’ve found a lab near my office that develops film, they even do 120 film and understand film from holga and lomo cameras. I will be using them for any future film developing!!!
From reading a bit online, sometimes the lab tech at these drug store film developing places may run the black and white film through the color process. I’m not sure how they could have done this, but it happens. I do not own a scanner, so I haven’t been able to scan the negatives to see if they are green and brown tinted like the prints are.
Here’s a few of the film images for you. Thankfully I asked for the images on CD also (I don’t own a scanner right now) So I was able to tweak these in photoshop.
The top image is the AFTER version. I opened it in photoshop and just chose ‘desaturate’. Nothing else was done in photoshop other than resizing these images for the web. The bottom image is the BEFORE version…how Walgreens developed it.
*I must also note that this was a pretty overcast and dreary day…so the skies are blown out, there were no clouds and everything was just solid gray.








Depending on your monitor calibration, you may not see much of a difference between the images…but I can assure you, that the way these are displaying on my screen are the way they look on the CD and the prints…there’s a huge difference.
One other funny thing I have to mention….. I have seen the world through a crop sensor camera for YEARS now. From the Digital Rebel, to the XTi and now the 50D. I use the 50mm 1.8 prime lens quite a bit (and now the 50mm 1.4). BUT…to look through a normal 35mm film camera with a 50mm lens on it is a whole new world……everything is so much WIDER now! lol This makes me want to do two things…. save up for the 5D Mark II and also purchase another FD lens for the AE-1 35mm film camera, something even wider than the 50mm!
I did load up the Diani Mini lomo camera with film and brought that with me to Epcot yesterday, unfortunately drinking as much as I did at Epcot (it was my birthday after all!), I had somehow managed to set the Diani Mini in B mode (bulb), so every single photo from that roll is blurry because I did not have it in N mode, which would have given me sharper shots at 1/100th of a second, LOL. Well, live and learn I say! Next roll I’ll be sober and make sure it’s on the right setting!
Would you like to see one of the photos from the Diana Mini? One of the silly, drunken, bulb mode, blurry photos?
