one year ago / canon rebel & expired Kodak Gold


El Capitan Canyon | Santa Barbara, CA
June 2012

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One year ago I made the decision to use film for my personal work and family photos. I picked up the only film camera I had on hand (a 90’s Canon Rebel) and in the same bag found ten rolls of Kodak Gold 400. So that’s what I used on my first foray back to the medium from whence I came. And this is the first time I used it. Getting these scans back was like getting an email from your best friend from sixth grade, the one you haven’t talked to in fifteen years, but who stills feels like the peanut butter to your jelly, the sun to your sky. Like, “WHERE HAVE YOU BEEN ALL THESE YEARS?!” And, “WHY DID WE EVER FALL OUT OF TOUCH?!”

I didn’t know this at the time, but with expired film you actually need to overexpose, and I didn’t. So a lot of these are underexposed and grainy, but I’m okay with that. Because that’s the deal with film, you get what you get. You get what you get.

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I have an elderly Aunt and Uncle who are in the process of cleaning out their home and giving things away. Things they have had tucked away in their cupboards and garage for thirty or forty years. Last Thanksgiving, Uncle Leonard brought a Nikon One-Touch to my mom’s house, thinking “one of us kids” might like it. It was perfectly timed, because after six months of use, my Canon Rebel had begun breaking down. I was having trouble locking focus and the battery door insisted on popping open, batteries falling out and camera rendered useless at the most inopportune moments, so I was ecstatic to have another option fall into my lap. One with sentiment attached, even better. It’s entirely possible that the camera had recorded me, as a child, and I like the notion of that.

So, for the first half of this year, I have used the Nikon One-Touch as my main form of documenting my children and my life. This point and shoot camera (like all point and shoot cameras) has given me freedom from technical thought, which is what the iPhone camera also brings to the table, and what I mean is – I don’t have to think about exposure. I only have to look, see, and then push a button. In certain aspects of my personal and family work, I appreciate the speed and ease this camera offers me. The images themselves feel so cut directly from the moment, like there’s nothing in between you when you see them in front of you. It’s exactly what was in front of me, nothing more and nothing less. No shallow depth of field to manipulate the viewer’s eye into being drawn to a certain place, no fancy bells and whistles.

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I recently picked up a Canon EOS 3, a film SLR. Which I wanted for the entirely opposite reason that I have come to appreciate in the Nikon One-Touch. I want to have some control. I want some depth of field. I want a little more quality and depth to the images. I haven’t run any film through it yet, but I’m getting ready to.

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Here’s a link to the “film” blog category I created to keep everything organized in one place.

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Happy Friday.

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32 Comments

  1. i just put a roll in an old canon a-1. so excited to give it a try. love that you are using film for family and projects. great idea. might have to steal it. your images are gorgeous – i love the darker feel to them. so much depth. where are you getting your film developed?

  2. I just purchased my second EOS 3. One to keep bw loaded and one for color. I love them. I also grabbed a Mamiya 645e, but damn the manual focus is tough w/ little kids. Love these, can’t wait to see more.

  3. Film is so amazing, you said it perfectly about it being like your best friend from 6th grade you haven’t talked to in forever. I feel so much more inspired shooting a roll of film in my Pentax MX all manual than I do with any of my fancy pants digital equipment. The wait to get the film makes it all the more better. I can’t wait to see more of your film work! I love the way you see the world!

  4. Mmmm yummy colors and what a gorgeous place to get away to! Are you mailing them off to be developed or do you go local? Costco has been fine for me thus far, but I’m not loving the scans when you zoom in close. There’s a place called The Darkroom in San Clemente that takes mailed-in rolls that I’ve heard good things about (and is fairly reasonable), but haven’t tried them out yet.

  5. seeing these makes me want to go back to collect more feathers, take downhill hikes and sit around the fire to wait for our stinky friends. beautiful shots, as always, my friend. you capture our times together so well. love you and anna having some girl time together in the meadow:)

  6. THIS. Loved our talk tonight about this. My in laws gave me their old film slr over cmas with some expired film. Gonna test it out when I get home. Thanks for the inspiration.

  7. Just popped in for a bit. I was looking at these really quickly and noting now much I love the color. Then wen’t back and saw the title. I swear, there isn’t anything like color film. These are great!

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