mrjames
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Hi, I've recently acquired a tasty little Olympus 35rc to shoot film again, i'm currently typing up a report on my experiences of using the camera, using a rangefinder, and on shooting film again, so i'll post that up soon.
But my questions are that now I have 3 rolls of film to process, what the hell do I do with them. I certainly don't want to process them myself (they are colour), but i'm concerned about sending them away for a couple of reasons.
1- I don't know whether the camera leaks light, or if it's even capable of taking a picture, so I don't want to send them away to somewhere like Peak Imaging and spend a lot of money on 3 potentially unusable rolls, but there are some potentially good images on those rolls so I don't want to screw them up either.
2- I don't know if the meter is accurate, my girlfriends lightmeter (she's never used it) gives a different result but I think the vintage lightmeter might be way out of whack, so if the shots are under/over exposed can a lab compensate for that? Do they do this automatically, or is it something I have to ask for
3- On the first roll I was told on good authority that it was a 36 roll film, (but later found it to be a 24), I noticed it getting increasingly difficult to wind on until I was literally pushing the lever with all my force (I just figured it was old rusty camera syndrome) and after hitting 36 and rewinding I opened up to find tiny bits of film inside the camera, presumably where the continued winding had torn through the sprocket holes- is this likely to be recoverable, and if so will snappy snaps be able to process it or do I have to go to a pro lab?
I have heard horror stories about boots and jessops being incompetant and scratching negatives, but snappy snaps seems to be ok (expensive though) and i'd rather speak to an actual person and explain what I want and then discuss things with, I have heard about club 35 but I don't wan't to wait so long and i'd rather deal with a real person for these first rolls. I don't really want prints straight out of camera as I have a specific visual style I want all my photos to look like so nothing ever goes through my editing workflow as it was shot, so I was just going to get them processed and low res scanned so I can pick the ones I want and have them drum scanned at school (free use of hassleblad drum scanner is amazing) and then print them back out after a round of editing. I presume when I scan them I will be able to play around with the colour in photoshop, dodge and burn etc, but will the 'exposure' have to be set in the processing, or in photoshop after the scan- if the film comes back say a stop underexposed can I lighten it in photoshop or is that something you do when developing.
Sorry for the stupid questions, it's been 10 years since I shot film and even then I only ever got terrible results, i've been digital ever since but since I bought the 35rc as an introduction to a digital leica i've been hooked on having a camera in my pocket 24/7
But my questions are that now I have 3 rolls of film to process, what the hell do I do with them. I certainly don't want to process them myself (they are colour), but i'm concerned about sending them away for a couple of reasons.
1- I don't know whether the camera leaks light, or if it's even capable of taking a picture, so I don't want to send them away to somewhere like Peak Imaging and spend a lot of money on 3 potentially unusable rolls, but there are some potentially good images on those rolls so I don't want to screw them up either.
2- I don't know if the meter is accurate, my girlfriends lightmeter (she's never used it) gives a different result but I think the vintage lightmeter might be way out of whack, so if the shots are under/over exposed can a lab compensate for that? Do they do this automatically, or is it something I have to ask for
3- On the first roll I was told on good authority that it was a 36 roll film, (but later found it to be a 24), I noticed it getting increasingly difficult to wind on until I was literally pushing the lever with all my force (I just figured it was old rusty camera syndrome) and after hitting 36 and rewinding I opened up to find tiny bits of film inside the camera, presumably where the continued winding had torn through the sprocket holes- is this likely to be recoverable, and if so will snappy snaps be able to process it or do I have to go to a pro lab?
I have heard horror stories about boots and jessops being incompetant and scratching negatives, but snappy snaps seems to be ok (expensive though) and i'd rather speak to an actual person and explain what I want and then discuss things with, I have heard about club 35 but I don't wan't to wait so long and i'd rather deal with a real person for these first rolls. I don't really want prints straight out of camera as I have a specific visual style I want all my photos to look like so nothing ever goes through my editing workflow as it was shot, so I was just going to get them processed and low res scanned so I can pick the ones I want and have them drum scanned at school (free use of hassleblad drum scanner is amazing) and then print them back out after a round of editing. I presume when I scan them I will be able to play around with the colour in photoshop, dodge and burn etc, but will the 'exposure' have to be set in the processing, or in photoshop after the scan- if the film comes back say a stop underexposed can I lighten it in photoshop or is that something you do when developing.
Sorry for the stupid questions, it's been 10 years since I shot film and even then I only ever got terrible results, i've been digital ever since but since I bought the 35rc as an introduction to a digital leica i've been hooked on having a camera in my pocket 24/7
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