Casual Photophile
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At Casual Photophile we review classic cameras and legacy lenses and discuss their continued relevance in the digital age. Find articles on film cameras, digital cameras and photography, lens reviews, tips and techniques, photographer profiles, reviews, retrospectives, and more.
Casual Photophile
12h ago
For beginners, shooting film can be a challenge. But shooting film underwater? The learning curve swings up exponentially when you add in variables of constantly changing light, the vagaries of scale focus, and remembering how to swim.
Getting your first underwater rolls of film back from the lab can be a sobering experience. Your images of the undersea world, which had looked so vivid and alive, are inexplicably dull, dark, and blurry, a seascape like nothing that you remembered. In those early days you might be tempted to give up.
I’ve been shooting the Nikonos V, Nikon’s most advanced manua ..read more
Casual Photophile
1w ago
It’s time for another five-minute film review. These articles are made to help new film photographers pick a film and have success shooting it. Today we’re looking at Ilford Delta 400, one of the most versatile black-and-white films on the market today.
Ilford’s film lineup can be broken into two major segments – the “Plus” range for consumer quality films and the “Delta” range for more “professional” films. (They also offer a third segment of specialty film that we won’t touch on today, though longer articles on these have been published – SFX and Ortho).
The Plus range, or “consumer” film co ..read more
Casual Photophile
2w ago
Photographer: Jeff Greenstein
Camera: Pentax MF
Lens: 28mm F/2.8 Pentax SMC
Film: FPP Color 125 (Svema)
This shot is both strange and serendipitous and I have to venture deep in the weeds to explain why. Come with me, why dontcha.
Let’s start with the camera, a Pentax MF. A what now? A Pentax MF? Friends, this is quite the odd duck, and Google as ye may, you will find very little information on it. What little you will learn is that it was manufactured around 1977, it’s a variant of the Pentax ME, and it’s designed for medical applications. Meaning it’s meant to be paired with an e ..read more
Casual Photophile
2w ago
As the price of film and development costs rise, my mind is less often drawn to the dwindling stock of film in the fridge, and more often to what happens next. I am not alone in this. As users search for ways of making pictures that feel more authentic than their phone’s camera, compact digital cameras from the 1990s and 2000s have been gradually gaining value.
There is more than a dash of nostalgia in this market, and the illusory value of high megapixels has shifted now to the back of potential digital camera buyers’ minds. We want pictures that look like the pictures of our childhood, and d ..read more
Casual Photophile
3w ago
When I reviewed the Keks Camera KM02 OLED light meter back in 2022, I called it “the best $100 shoe-mount light meter on the market.” But it wasn’t without problems. I mostly disliked that the buttons were unlabeled, which made operation nearly impossible without reading and re-reading the manual. Two years later, I still use the KM02 any time I’m shooting a meter less film camera (and still getting tripped up by those inscrutable buttons).
Now Keks has released their newest OLED light meter, the KM-Q. This meter is their smallest meter yet, at nearly half the size of the earlier KM02. It ..read more
Casual Photophile
1M ago
It was the winter of my discontent, made awful by leaden skies and the prospect of no work on the horizon. As a freelancer, my gigs are highly seasonal, and I found myself at the end of last holiday season with little to do but walk around the city with a camera. So it was that in early January of last year, I stood along the East River with my freshly-purchased Olympus Pen-D. I walked north from Wall Street, past the finance bros and tourists, with nothing for company but the white noise of traffic on FDR Drive, and waited. In the distance, two birds dropped from the girders of the highway ov ..read more
Casual Photophile
1M ago
In September, 2023, when the Polaroid I-2 finally came out, my expectations were sky high. But the first reviews left me disappointed. A plastic lens? A viewfinder camera? Manual control only via a menu? I will not enjoy shooting this camera. And no, I will keep my 700 euro (thank you very much).
At this time I was shooting a lot of Fuji Instax Wide on a Frankenstein Polaroid 160 that I had made a couple of years earlier. It had an old darkroom lens on the front, and half an Instax Wide 300 camera on the back. The images it made were very nice, but the wide aspect ratio wasn’t doing it for me ..read more
Casual Photophile
2M ago
This is hard to say without sounding pretentious, but when I was working in Japan some years ago, I became interested in Zen Buddhism and in particular, the life of Sen no Rikyū, a 16th-century tea master.
Through Rikyū’s writings, I was introduced to the phrase ichi-go ichi-e (一期一会), which literally means “one time, one meeting.” Wikipedia describes it as the “cultural concept of treasuring the unrepeatable nature of a moment” – a reminder that each meeting is unique, and we should cherish it as such. Even if the same people meet at the same place again, a particular gathering can never be re ..read more
Casual Photophile
2M ago
Ricoh imaging has just announced that the first camera in their Pentax Film Project will be a half-frame 35mm film camera. The camera will feature automatic and manual functions, zone focus, a lens inspired by the well-regarded Pentax Espio and IQ series of point-and-shoot-cameras from the 1990s and 2000s, and a manual film rewind function.
In a video released to the Pentax Film Project’s YouTube channel, Product Planner Takeo Suzuki (TKO) goes into further details of the camera and offers insight into why these design choices were made.
They wanted to start their film camera project lineup wi ..read more
Casual Photophile
2M ago
The Polaroid I-2 is the most advanced instant camera that Polaroid has ever made, offering much that other instant cameras don’t – full user control of exposure, fast and accurate auto-focus, and the sharpest lens ever made for a Polaroid camera (designed by former Olympus engineers, no less).
That’s exciting stuff, even if the camera’s price isn’t. At $600, the Polaroid I-2 costs $450 more than the brand’s “standard” camera, the Polaroid Now+.
When the I-2 released in the fall of 2023, Polaroid’s marketing team positioned the new camera as a high-end tool for discerning photographers who ..read more