I’m totally crazy. I bought a Canon 5D mark ii online from B&H on my birthday (March 23rd). It arrived a few days later. It sat in a box by my desk for a month. This is the camera I’ve been reading and drooling over since it came out almost two years ago. I guess I’m just totally OCD. It’s like I have to read the manual first even though I’ve been shooting with the mark i already, or maybe the stars just have to be aligned perfectly for me to start shooting with this thing. Meanwhile I’ve found myself walking around with my Holga, my cheap little plastic toy wonder, and shooting up a few rolls of 120 Kodak film. So here I am with this $2,500 state of the art digital SLR at home, but I’m walking around with this $50 piece of plastic fantastic. So, I’m making a promise right now. I will strap a lens to the new 5D mark ii and start shooting with it… eventually. Heck, I’m off to Los Angeles in a couple of weeks. Perfect excuse. In the meantime, I’ll be posting nothing but these toy camera picks for awhile. Yay!
I finally took my Holga 120 TLR out for a test drive this weekend and shot my first roll of 120 film. It was pretty strange jumping from the digital convenience of the Canon 5D with beautiful glass to the limitations of a toy film camera with a plastic lens. It’s not just the fact that the camera lacks an accurate view finder, but after taking a picture, there’s this strange silence. This is the moment I often check the histogram of the image on the back of my Canon to make sure I exposed correctly… but of course, this moment doesn’t happen with the Holga. I’m left wondering whether I even took a picture at all.
I modified my Holga before shooting (see previous post). I think the modifications helped. The photos were fuzzy around the edges. A few of the pictures had some pretty cool light leaks. My roll of Kodak 400vc film limited me to just 12 square formated shots. I experimented a little with some in-camera double exposures which is a technique I’ve also had a lot fun with digitally (see ~ The Laughing Skull and The Double Monalisa ~ as well as ~ Zot! [in camera double exposure] ~).
Shooting film for the first time since I was a teenager made me feel kind of like a blind man. It was definitely a thrill taking my camera to the lab and waiting patiently for processing and scans of my negatives to be completed. It was a complete mystery to me how they would turn out. I already knew that the Holga would in some way push my subjects through it’s plastic into some strange toy camera world. What I didn’t know was whether or not I would like any of what it ended up outputting. When I finally got home and brought the digital scans up on my computer screen, I was pleased to find a few shots that I actually thought were pretty cool.
So you were able to get the film out without ripping it in half? Well aren’t you fancy…
Americanvirus
Kristense – It is a tricky little monster. You definitely want to make sure after your last shot to advance the film even more for awhile until the roll has completely been advanced onto one side of the camera. As you keep turning the knob to advance the film you’ll suddenly feel it become loose. Advance it a couple turns more to make sure. Then when you open the Holga, the film should be completely rolled to one side. Then it’s just a matter of jiggling the roll out. Make sure to keep the roll tight. I wrapped mine up in tinfoil to keep dust and light from it until I got to the lab.
Last week I modified my Holga before taking it out for my first toy camera photo adventure! The purpose of this modification was to expand the image on the negative, increasing the vignette and fuzziness around the edges of my photographed image, and also increasing the amount of light leaks onto the image in order to give my toy camera pictures more of a toy camera look. That sounds funny, but it’s true. The modification also includes adding a cable release adapter and cable release in order to prevent blurriness caused by camera shake when pulling the shutter. All of these modifications I found in the very inspiring book, Plastic Cameras: Toying with Creativity by Michelle Bates. This book is full of cool ideas and includes tons of great photographs by photographers from all over the world. Tomorrow I’ll be posting a few of my first Holga shots but until then, here are the steps I took for these particular modifications so if inspired you can modify your Holga this way too!
HOLGA MODIFICATION TUTORIAL:
note: Steps 2 and 3 should be switched (seemed in the spirit of toy cameras to not fix the mistake)
STEP 1 – COVER THE COUNTER WINDOW: Cover the counter window with electrical tape. This is to prevent light from leaking onto the film and burning little numbers and letters onto the center of your images. You can lift the tape in diffused light to read the numbers while turning the film to the next exposure. Just don’t untape the window in sunlight (unless you want numbers and letters burned into your images).
STEP 2 – SMOOTH THE SEEMS: After removing the frame insert (Ooops… see STEP 3 – REMOVE THE FRAME INSERT), smooth down the seems with electrical tape. This is to prevent the film from scratching as it passes through the camera.
STEP 3 – REMOVE THE FRAME INSERT: Remove the Frame Insert from the camera. This will extend the frame and cause the fuzziness around the edges of your images that one comes to expect from a toy camera. Removing the insert also tends to open the Holga up to more light leaks (but not the kind with numbers and letters in them [see STEP 1 – COVER THE COUNTER WINDOW]).
STEP 4 – STRAP IT UP: Secure the camera to the camera’s plastic back with Velcro Straps (or electical tape). This is to prevent the back from falling off before you’ve finished shooting your roll of film which would result in the loss of all your images.
STEP 5 – CABLE RELEASE: Add a shutter release adapter ($15 on lomography.com) and cable release ($2 to $5 used, at your local camera store) to prevent camera shake.
OPTIONAL STEP 6 – SEAL FOR LEAKS (if you don’t like leaks): After loading your film and sealing the back, you can also tape up all the seems of the camera with black electrical tape to prevent light leaks. I didn’t, because at the moment I’m kind of digging the light leaks.
[…] from the Bates’ book. If you’re curious, you can see a step by step Holga modification tutorial HERE on the blog. These changes were made to the camera in order to extend the image on the negative, […]
Sadly Lomography stopped making shutter release adapters, I make them for fellow enthusiasts so you can do long exposures. hope thats helpful http://www.sparrowfabrications.co.uk
Americanvirus is the personal photo blog of photographer Jonas Seaman. His work has appeared on television's The Today Show, The Ellen DeGeneres Show, and Inside Edition, as well as numerous magazines and blogs from around the world.
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this image makes me extremely jealous. excellent.
Thanks Jonathan. Well you know, I was kind of inspired by your Grand Canyon photos.