

Second, you end up with much better quality, non-Instagram-filtered images that you'd actually be comfortable sharing and tagging yourself in.Ībove is an image of yours-truly from last fall on Superia 400 X-Tra (cheap, drug store film). This has a couple benefits, the first being that you get control over the images - having the BTS on film prevents people from releasing anything too important before you have a chance to process and edit the real photos. I always take one or two little Canon Sure Shot Max cameras (that I bought on eBay for under $20) to my shoots and give them to models, MUAs, stylist, etc to ask them to shoot all their behind-the-scenes work with it. Brandy Jaggers Bonus Tip: BTS Re-Imagined Some Awesome Work All Done on 135 Compact Camerasīelow are the photographers in order of their appearance:ġ. From a technical perspective, there's a lot to love about these little guys and nothing with quite the same specs (full frame, awesome fixed lens, small form factor) really comes close (in my opinion) in the digital space. Contax T2s and T3s feature titanium bodies, and stellar Zeiss 35mm f/2.8 lenses Leica MiniLuxes and CMs have a f/2.4 Summarit 40mm my personal favorite, Fuji Klasse S, has a 38mm f/2.8 with Fuji's legendary Super EBC coating. It's like the mixture between your mom's camera, a bar of soap, and a sports car - with a Zeiss lens.Ī lot of cameras are nothing to bat an eye at. One of my good buddies, Anthony Peter said this about his Contax T3: When you do finally get your scans back, you get the opportunity to relive an experience or small moment you'd perhaps forgotten about. Depending on what you load up in your camera, it could take weeks, sometimes a month or two, to chew through the entire roll. One of the coolest (to me at least) results of shooting film is the idea of every roll being a time capsule. It's not that it's a bad thing, but it can certainly be a distraction. It's a Time Capsule - Don't Post Right Awayīuilding off the last point, when you shoot a 135 compact, you're at least an hour out from posting on Instagram. You're shooting the moment, not getting "the shot" and that's okay. I find that when I shoot with my compacts in particular, I am much more inclined to quickly pick up my camera, take a quick picture, then get back to enjoying myself. Is there a hair in the wrong place and are some of the lines crooked? Better re-shoot! With all things film you don't really have this option. This is most apparent when I shoot digital - I'm constantly chimping. As the child of a pseudo-tigermom, I tend to err on the OCD side. Imposing limits on yourself will make you more creative and you'll be forced to see beyond the abilities of your world-class gear to focus on the things in an image that really matter – namely what you put in front of the camera. I bring my Fuji Klasse and a grab-bag of film. When I travel, I don't bring a SLR, bag of lenses, flashes, tripod, etc.
35MM POINT AND SHOOT MANUAL
In the same vein as the above, having limited (and in some cases no) manual controls gets you to focus on the things that matter. shots fired! If, like me, you're too broke to pick up a new Leica, using a compact for your day-to-day shooting might be the next best thing. You'll notice your pictures having added depth, more careful layered compositions, and you'll find yourself relying on f/ 1.2 as a stylistic crutch. Using a compact camera is an awesome tool to encourage better compositional habits. If you can't afford a rangefinder go buy a $5 point and shoot with a big viewfinder from a thrift store and practice composing pictures even if you aren't shooting. Shooting with deeper stops forces you to use all the elements in the frame to tell a more complex story.Īlso shooting a rangefinder really helps as you aren't seeing through the lens and thus are forced to deal with all the elements of the frame regardless of stop. So here it is, the simple answer: stop shooting wide open when you don't need to be.
35MM POINT AND SHOOT HOW TO
I get a lot of compliments on composition and a lot of questions about how to get better. See the World, Not the DOFĪ while ago, Ryan Muirhead (easily one of my favorite photographers) posted this: Over the last year, I've replaced all my silly day-to-day iPhone shooting with more deliberate work with a Fuji compact and cheap drug store color film, and I'd highly encourage you to try the same. Whether you're using a thrift-store Canon compact or a posh Contax T3, shooting with a little film point and shoot will change the way you operate as a photographer, how you interact with your subjects or people around you, and how you create.
