Feeling something was missing, I got an n90s for a song off FleaBay and brought some film along on a trip to our cabin in Alaska in the spring of ’19 and found my joy again of making a physical product. After loosing most of my film kit in an accident while moving in the late ’90s, I made the switch to digital. My newspaper route paid for lots of rolls of Plus-X, Tri-X and the occasional color stocks.
I am still surprised that they let us play with methyl-ethyl-death chemicals. 'Water and Cigar' NIKON F90x, NIKKOR 50mm f1.8 'Untitled, Burnaby' NIKON F90x, NIKKOR 28-105mm f/3.5-4.5 Some photographers travel to faraway places or put themselves in extreme situations to get up close with the extraordinary. I picked up a love of the photographic process back in middle school during the early-mid 1980’s shooting my Dad’s Minolta SRT-100 and the schools Pentax K1000 and some random medium format cameras that the teacher had. The conditions were tricky with blazing bright sun and lots of chrome and reflections. I had gotten my atomic energy badge back in scouts, so this trip fed my inner nerd. I went to a car show with my Nikon f90x and a roll of FP4. While I battled a recalcitrant turbo in our 1983 VW Campervan, I did some ‘nuclear tourism’ with stops at the EBR-1 reactor in Idaho and the pinnacle was getting on a tour of the ‘B Reactor’ at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation. I got to go visit a bunch of nerdy places that my (at the time) four-year-old either could not go to, or would have been bored to tears at. Get answers to your questions in our photography forums. Of Idaho's EBR-I nuclear reactor on Kodak Tri-X 400 (35mm Format / EI 1600 / Nikon n90s + Nikon 35-70mm f/2.8 AI-S) - EMULSIVE Close Search for:īefore the world stopped turning, I took a road-trip to the US Pacific Northwest with the dog while my wife and daughter visited the outlaws in the midwest. Expert news, reviews and videos of the latest digital cameras, lenses, accessories, and phones.
I love the F90X as a camera body itself, and combine that to having no budget left, the F90X will have to be At Wisley Gardent on Fuji Superia 1600 35mm Format / EI 1600 / Nikon F90X + Nikkor 135mm f/2.8 AI + Micro-Nikkor 55mm f/3.
Nikon f90x youtube iso#
It's modern enough to have the essential "up to date" features, but old enough so it still looks (and feels) like it belongs to days long past. Nikon F90X Pro, Sigma 28200mm f/3.8-5.6 DL Macro Ilford Delta 400 rated at ISO 320 This scene reminded me of the characters created to advertise the Renault Clio car in the UK during the 1990s (search YouTube for the videos) and was taken during one of our many ‘beer in a pavement café’ interludes. That's my version of film camera nostalgia, it was there with me when I started.Īnd I love the fact it's quite modern, but not identical to DSLRs like the F100, F5 and F6, which are essentially DSLRs without a sensor. Not fast compared to today's standards but accurate. My personal opinion, the F90x autofocus is excellent.
Nikon f90x youtube pro#
When I was starting in photography around 2007, I came accross a F90X body and bought it. The F90x was the Nikon pro choice at that point in time with many pros moving from their F4's to F90x's until the F5 was released. There're reasons why the F90X was chosen. I'm finally uploading a new video, can rest and post on forums for the night.Īppreciate a lot your recommendations, I'd sure do it if I could spend.īut my YT channel is a black hole sucking every cent from my pockets, reason why I complain so much about not having a scanner, otherwise I would just buy a Plustek 8200 and be very happy Give a look at Gary Bernstein and Robert Farber's work! Both have authored a wealth if their experience on their books. If it was good enough for David Chan, Rich Fegely, Arny Freytag, Steve Wayda, Dave Mecey, Ken Marcus, Pompeo Posar and Mario Casilli it should work for you! I use that lens recipe to this day with film or digital. It was the go-to recipe for 35mm at Playboy when I was there.
or the 180mm f2.8 with a matte box shade on the lens.
Nikon f90x youtube manual#
Nothing beats the old standard of a manual Nikon F2 with a Nikkor 105mm f2.5, the 105mm f2.8 Micro, 85mm f1.8. If your gonna shoot 35, ditch electronics. The 35mm Nikon FM SLR film camera was one of my first cameras when I first got into film photography (See FM example images).I tend to shoot with Leica film cameras now for 35mm film but as the years have gone by I have picked up a Nikon F4 and a Nikon F5.