Stanley wrote:Pity the neg was scratched.......

Stanley wrote:Pity the neg was scratched.......
Used to push FP4 like that too. Hours (literally) of fun. All so much quicker now.Stanley wrote:I am reminded of the days when we used to under-expose Tri-X and over develop a touch to get juicier negs. All seems a million miles away now.....
I did look at the E5 but couldn't justify the extra cost. The OMD-EM1 uses micro four thirds so I'd need an adapter to use my lenses on it.hartley353 wrote:Good choice Kev, According to a letter in this weeks AP the E-620 may be as far as Olympus is going to go, unless you want the E-M1, It could be the end of a long line.
Unfortunately the system I didn't go for. Four thirds is very similar to the old SLR cameras, mirror. pentaprism etc. micro four thirds uses a mirrorless systemStanley wrote:Kev, what's "micro four thirds"?
I know exactly what you mean. Glad it all went well.Stanley wrote:Here's something that Kev will recognise immediately. As the Belgian bionic eye settles in everything is much brighter but the main thing I've noticed is the colour balance. Remember the difference between Ektachrome and Kodachrome? My new eye is Ektachrome and the other one that still needs doing is Kodachrome.
Hi David, no, it's 3 separate images stitched together in Photoshop. I took just over 400 during their 1 hour set. Stage lighting made things a lot easier, no need for flash.David Whipp wrote:Looks like strong stuff at Oxenhope - you're seeing triple Kev.
Is that the effect of a strobe?