Recently I've spent quite a bit of time planning and preparing for the next few months. Initially, I didn't have a great deal of plans or ideas about how I would undertake the idea of using a different film camera each month. I figured I would just find a camera, load it with film and then get any exposed film developed! Not so difficult when you already have a good range of cameras and a selection of film to use. I have two companies I use for developing, depending on what I am processing, and that was pretty much all of my thought process.
However, it was only the other day, whilst getting the blog started, I realised I would need to think about several things. After all cameras, film and developing have never been an issue. And, as this is meant to be something of a (re)learning process, I figured I should find some cameras other than those I would ordinarily use.
Tuesday, 31 May 2016
Saturday, 28 May 2016
First some ground rules...
So, being a bit of a process driven person I decided that I should set myself some simple guidelines. Something to provide consistency throughout my endeavors and structure to my works.
12 months. 12 cameras
12 months. 12 cameras
- Only one camera will be used during any given month as part of the project.
- Cameras will be analogue.
- I will publish all resulting images.
Wednesday, 25 May 2016
A little history...
I have always loved photography and can recall using cameras from a very young age.
My first steps into the medium where with my very own Halina 110 Instamatic. It featured on many a holiday and school trip and hidden in the depths of our cupboard are many of the resulting photos. Sadly the camera is lost in the depths of time rather than our storage and I have no recollection of where and when we parted company.
Having both a close family friend and an uncle who were keen amateur photographers only fueled my passion further. Watching images form on the photographic paper under the dim red tinge of a safelight was magical and something I wanted to learn.
My first "real" camera was a Zenit-11. A beast of a camera (and considerably heavier in comparison to my plastic Instamatic). My journey in to the world of SLR had begun. And, unknowingly, it would also be the beginnings of my love affair with Russian cameras and all things Lomo.
It was something of a love hate relationship between me and my Zenith. It's tendency to occasionally chew films up on the internal advancement cogs as you rewound an exposed film tested my patience and even my love of photography. Obviously I stuck it out, otherwise we wouldn't be here and I was shooting on my Zenit well in to my late 20's when it finally ground to a halt and the winding mechanism totally seized up.
For a short period of time I was camera-less.
I then entered the digital age and purchased a simple point and shoot Kodak EasyShare CX4210 with a mighty 2.0MP! I was quickly hooked again loving the fact that I saw instant results. No chewed up films! Who knew? I eventually progressed to a FujiFilm FinePix S700 Bridging Camera before quickly making my way in to the world of DSLR and purchasing a Canon 450D, something I still shoot with today.
At very much the same time as I was venturing into the digital age I was also introduced to the world of Lomography and all things analogue, specifically the Holga. I instantly fell in love with the mighty plastic camera and as a result (re)discovered Russian cameras.
For a time I shot a lot of film. I purchased a lot of cameras. I experimented! Running 35mm films through the Holga; converting an old Brownie 127 to shoot 35mm film; building pinhole cameras for the very first time. Film was back and with a vengeance. But the simplicity of digital was slowly luring me away from the world of film.
I was never tempted by Instagram. I was shooting Medium Format film with my Holga at the time and I always felt it was a cheap imitation. Why fake it when you could do it for real? But then I discovered EyeEm. This has been a major draw from the analogue to the digital. The development and lure of the marketplace and digital simplicity to take, upload and sell my photographic works (past and present) has been a very big draw (and partly the reason that I stalled for a year on the advent of this project).
And this is where you find me. My Canon 450D is still my DSLR (although I plan to upgrade to a 5D); I use my Samsung Galaxy S5 and have recently purchased a CamKix lens kit for a little more choice; and still my analogue cameras keep reminding me that I need to give them an outing now and again.
So, it's time to start shooting with one of my 12 cameras.....
My first steps into the medium where with my very own Halina 110 Instamatic. It featured on many a holiday and school trip and hidden in the depths of our cupboard are many of the resulting photos. Sadly the camera is lost in the depths of time rather than our storage and I have no recollection of where and when we parted company.
Having both a close family friend and an uncle who were keen amateur photographers only fueled my passion further. Watching images form on the photographic paper under the dim red tinge of a safelight was magical and something I wanted to learn.
![]() |
| Zenith-11 Ilford FP4 (Film and paper) |
My first "real" camera was a Zenit-11. A beast of a camera (and considerably heavier in comparison to my plastic Instamatic). My journey in to the world of SLR had begun. And, unknowingly, it would also be the beginnings of my love affair with Russian cameras and all things Lomo.
![]() |
| Zenith-11 Ilford FP4 (Film and Paper) |
It was something of a love hate relationship between me and my Zenith. It's tendency to occasionally chew films up on the internal advancement cogs as you rewound an exposed film tested my patience and even my love of photography. Obviously I stuck it out, otherwise we wouldn't be here and I was shooting on my Zenit well in to my late 20's when it finally ground to a halt and the winding mechanism totally seized up.
For a short period of time I was camera-less.
I then entered the digital age and purchased a simple point and shoot Kodak EasyShare CX4210 with a mighty 2.0MP! I was quickly hooked again loving the fact that I saw instant results. No chewed up films! Who knew? I eventually progressed to a FujiFilm FinePix S700 Bridging Camera before quickly making my way in to the world of DSLR and purchasing a Canon 450D, something I still shoot with today.
![]() |
| Kodak EasyShare |
![]() |
| Kodak EasyShare |
![]() |
| Kodak EasyShare |
At very much the same time as I was venturing into the digital age I was also introduced to the world of Lomography and all things analogue, specifically the Holga. I instantly fell in love with the mighty plastic camera and as a result (re)discovered Russian cameras.
For a time I shot a lot of film. I purchased a lot of cameras. I experimented! Running 35mm films through the Holga; converting an old Brownie 127 to shoot 35mm film; building pinhole cameras for the very first time. Film was back and with a vengeance. But the simplicity of digital was slowly luring me away from the world of film.
I was never tempted by Instagram. I was shooting Medium Format film with my Holga at the time and I always felt it was a cheap imitation. Why fake it when you could do it for real? But then I discovered EyeEm. This has been a major draw from the analogue to the digital. The development and lure of the marketplace and digital simplicity to take, upload and sell my photographic works (past and present) has been a very big draw (and partly the reason that I stalled for a year on the advent of this project).
And this is where you find me. My Canon 450D is still my DSLR (although I plan to upgrade to a 5D); I use my Samsung Galaxy S5 and have recently purchased a CamKix lens kit for a little more choice; and still my analogue cameras keep reminding me that I need to give them an outing now and again.
So, it's time to start shooting with one of my 12 cameras.....
Saturday, 21 May 2016
And so it begins...
The very fact that I initially set out and created the template for this Blog over a year ago with no further action has only reinforced my initial reasoning and rationale for my need to undertake it in the first place.
Put very simply I feel that I have become a complacent participant in the digital photographic age!
I needed to address this. I actually feel a little guilty! My cherished and beloved collection of cameras lay in their boxes and cases protected and safe but increasingly used less and less.
And so I set about hatching a plan. Something that would encourage me to use my cameras again. Possibly buy some more! But more importantly reconnect with the photographic process.
It had to be something that would keep me going and focus my efforts. Knowing that I have five films awaiting processing (and a couple possibly partially shot) was a further sad indictment of my detachment from analogue and film photography.
I wanted it to be something that would ensure that I used each of my cameras, was time bound and most importantly, NOT DIGITAL!
So here we are. Albeit a year after my original idea to focus some energy back in to analogue photography.
Twelve months. Twelve cameras.
Each month dedicated to one camera the results of which will be published here!
Now to decide on the runners.....
Put very simply I feel that I have become a complacent participant in the digital photographic age!
I needed to address this. I actually feel a little guilty! My cherished and beloved collection of cameras lay in their boxes and cases protected and safe but increasingly used less and less.
And so I set about hatching a plan. Something that would encourage me to use my cameras again. Possibly buy some more! But more importantly reconnect with the photographic process.
It had to be something that would keep me going and focus my efforts. Knowing that I have five films awaiting processing (and a couple possibly partially shot) was a further sad indictment of my detachment from analogue and film photography.
I wanted it to be something that would ensure that I used each of my cameras, was time bound and most importantly, NOT DIGITAL!
So here we are. Albeit a year after my original idea to focus some energy back in to analogue photography.
Twelve months. Twelve cameras.
Each month dedicated to one camera the results of which will be published here!
Now to decide on the runners.....
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