hey yall.. thinking of buying a point and shoot film camera cuz im sick of disposables. Lots of what id be shooting would be on snow at work, wondering if anyone had opinions on 200 vs 400 film for brighter on snow shots. Cheers.
CENTOREhey yall.. thinking of buying a point and shoot film camera cuz im sick of disposables. Lots of what id be shooting would be on snow at work, wondering if anyone had opinions on 200 vs 400 film for brighter on snow shots. Cheers.
Definitely stick to the 200 film. 400 film is really meant for sunrise/sunset or lower light conditions. If its bright out, the 200 will be fine.
200 will have a tighter grain pattern and likely give you more nuanced tonality, which is what you need when you're shooting in snow because having that much of your image in the hgihlights is hard to pull details out of.
It really depends on so many variables. How you're shooting (angle of the sun plays a big part), how contrasty your lens is, how you're exposing, and what film stock it is etc. Some do better with highlights and some with shadows. do some research before you buy more than a roll of anything and remember that if you don't have it processed at a decent lab you'll never know if it was good film or bad film.
Go with 400. Straight up.
Do not worry about overexposing with it... film these days handles overexposure extremely well, and if youre using 35mm, there's very little to worry about when it comes to additional grain characteristics that might present themselves, because, well.. youre pretty much doomed to always have them unless youre shooting very specific stuff that won't be as good as a general use film.
I use a Nikon L35AF as my point and shoot camera in snow conditions, which has a fairly fast lens, but if you get something with a zoom lens, fully expect that thing to have a pretty slow lens - like a max of F5.6 or therabouts.. so you'll need at least 400 speed anyway, and might even want to push that stuff to 800 and compensate with a longer development time.
I use Tmax 400 as my go-to 35mm stock (unless I can't get it for a good price, in which case I use ilford HP5 which is also amazing). Some other great black and white films that generally run a little cheaper are Fomapan 400 (Arista EDU 400) and Kentmere 400 (Ilford Pan 400) and I have an affinity for each of these as well.
and if I'm shooting colour, it's generally always Lomo 400 or 800 since Portra or Ektar are priced pretty brutally these days.
Both Lomo 400 and 800 are films that were originally made for Kodak disposable cameras, and are pretty simple in their emulsion formula - with a decent amount of grain and some white balance shift that's not quite true to real life... and I overexpose the shit out of them and they render some amazing photos in these cases. Theyre cheaper than the Pro Kodak films but still have a ton of dynamic range when you overexpose them...