Category Archives: Holga

Photos I used a Holga camera to make the image

Nashville , 5 of ??? The Film Edition, at the Parthenon Replica

Of course I shot some film too. This was all developed at the Film Box Lab, which is located on the East Side of Nashville, in the young hipster part of town. Great lab, great folks!

Columns, shot on 35mm color and converted to B&W, and cropped square
Columns, shot on 35mm color and converted to B&W, and cropped square
35mm color converted to B&W
35mm color converted to B&W
Done with my Holga (See the sharpish center and the more liquid edges?
Done with my Holga (See the sharpish center and the more liquid edges?
This looks timeless to me.
This Holga photo looks timeless to me.
Column base details on the Parthenon in Nashville, TN. Shot on 35mm color, and converted to B&W
Column base details on the Parthenon in Nashville, TN. Shot on 35mm color, and converted to B&W

B&W Prints are on their way: Keep me in Chipotle and Film!

I just ordered all of these as 6 inch square photos in an 8×10 print, in True Black and White prints. These are some of my favorite images I’ve made recently. I hope you agree! I’m selling them for $25 each. 5$ shipping for the first one, the rest ride for free if you order more than one. Buy a few! Keep me in Chipotle or plenty of film for more shoots!

Holga Black and White in a Sunflower Field

I’ve been shooting sunflowers in a local field for a while. I decided to go and see how they are coming along this year and try some film shooting if I had the chance. I took my Holgas, and a few other film cameras along. Here are the Holga images I liked. I shot these using the classic Kodak Tri-x film and decided to try semi-stand developing using Rodinal 1:100 for an hour. Part of the reason to use the stand developing was so I could soup the film, then run over to Walgreens to pick up the 35mm film I shot and dropped off for one hour developing. I’ll post those 35mm photos in another post.

I think this was the result of not getting the Bulb/normal button all the way into the normal position, so the shutter got left open longer than it should have, and I got blur. At first I was going to delete it, but then I decided I liked it as kind of an impressionist photograph. Love to hear your thoughts. I liked this with a sepia look along with a few others in this group. I achieved that in Lightroom 4.1.

There is a blooming sunflower at the bottom of this photo. At first I thought it was the only one in the field, but soon saw there were just one or two other sprinkled in. I liked the way the lines of light colored plants led to the dark wall of trees and medium grey sky.The sunflowers are nicely lit from the sun that is camera right near sunset. This golden hour lighting isn’t as pretty in black and white as it is in person, or in color film, but I do like the repeated pattern of light and less light (can’t really call it dark!) of the flowers.

I think I saved the best for last. I like the lone blooming sunflower being accented in this photo. Since it’s one of the brightest spots in the photograph, our eyes are drawn to it quite naturally. One thing you might not notice if I didn’t point it out is the kind of halo effect above the trees in the background. That’s the result of bromide drag and might be considered a flaw in a negative from a typical camera. In this case, it just adds to the image, so it’s all good. I think the stand developing led to more grain than I’d get with regular D-76 or even standard development times in standard mixes of Rodinal, for example 1:25 or 1:50 ratios.

What do you think? Is the last the best? Does the haloing matter? Did you even see it?