Great set Nick, very impressed. Sorry for asking such a simple question but when you say Ilford 400 set to 200 does that mean that on the camera you tell it the ASA is 200 and would that then under-expose the images and if so by how many stops?
Andy
Thanks BY, clear as crystal now. So if you were sending to a developers you would ask them to pull process the developing (and pay extra I suspect)?
Andy

Great set Nick, very impressed. Sorry for asking such a simple question but when you say Ilford 400 set to 200 does that mean that on the camera you tell it the ASA is 200 and would that then under-expose the images and if so by how many stops?
Andy
This is the basis of pull-processing. You set the camera to meter as 200 iso, which results in a 1 stop overexposure on 400 iso film. Then, to get back to normal you under-develop the film by 1 stop, resulting in a properly exposed negative, but with less grain because the film has spent less time in the developer.
each doubling of the ISO = 1 stop,
50 - 100, 1 stop
50 - 200, 2 stop
50 - 400, 3 stop
etc
It's usually recomended that you only pull process by 1 stop (as above) whereas you can push process 2-3 stops (or more if you like grain like hailstones!)
Very nice
Studio shots on my Mamiya RZ67 Pro II.
Katy
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Paul
Love this shot!. Shame about the pimple though. Perhaps cloning it out?






Cloning?....Film?.....Begone Satan
These are some studio shots on 35mm B&W Fomapan 100 of Laura.
I thought I'd taken them on either a Pentax SP500 or Fujica ST605 but the focusing seems way too consistent - you won't be seeing any of the blurry colour shots I took with them- so I think it must have been an EOS500.
Paul
Cracking colours Richard. What film are you using?
Some photos from Croatia:
Olympus OM-2n
Zuiko 50mm 1.8 (+ filthy UV filter)
Reala 100 / NC 160 / VC 160 / Impresa 50 / Velvia 50
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These two where a case of the last frame on each roll and just wanted to get it done.
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New light seals on the EM

That last one Javier is sureal