Way cool! It’s small businesses like Jaggle Film that help maintain and increase interest in the current resurgence in film photography. I’ll definitely be buying one of these and extra cartridges. Thank you for showcasing this product!
Thanks Ari. So in addition to all the gear and stuff I need to make a photograph, now I need a lake too! You nailed the exposure on that direct positive selfie. I've found it to be a little tricky, probably just need to shoot more of it. The trouble is that it's been hard to find here in the USA for a long while. I've been playing with developing regular photo paper into a positive. It gives a different looking result that I rather like. Thanks again for another great video!
Up here, there is a lake for everyone 🙂 Yeah, it is tricky to expose. Gotta measure light properly. And regular photo paper is surely an option. I actually thought about that and trying to make also the positives on the lake. But then I came to my senses ....
i like that Jaggle Self developing holder product. it will be good for shooting RA4 reversal so that i can develop on the spot and then make adjustment to my filters.
Very cool! Reminiscent of Pinsta Pinhole Camera's dev process. I've been thinking of designing my own for Kingpin Cameras. This one opens another door of possibilities. Definitely into this kind of madness haha! Great video as always!
Very nice show and tell demonstration of this clever product ( I mean the daylight development tank for your paper). I have experimented with my Stearman Press 445 development tank, and just put the paper into it -- can't put paper into the filmholders -- and just let it float while doing the development. Of course putting the paper from the filmholder into the tank has to be done in a changing bag. This is much easier! --- What I do not like about the Harman Positve Paper is the fact that the images are mirrored, but thats the way "instant" photography works (using Polaroid instead of Instax gives you mirrored images, too).
Great video as always Ari. Your videos always get me excited about film photography. I love your viewpiont on photography and creativity. You always keep things new and fresh. Always searching for new photography experiences. By the way, what watch are you wearing?
@@ShootOnFilm Thank you Ari! A fully mechanical watch that must be wound every day. I would expect nothing less than for you to have a watch which requires action on your part to keep it running. Fits your personality and ethos perfectly. I have been looking for a fully mechanical watch to purchase. It might just be yours. Thank you again for all you do. Watching your videos is one of the great joys of my life and makes me feel like I am watching an artist and innovator with a passion for new photography experiences. What a great way to live.
True. That would be fun to try!!!! It is actually a very well-engineered thing. It is also light tight without extra light seals as you cannot have such if everything gets wet. It is just tight tolerances.
@@ShootOnFilm You can buy cordless hot air guns. Not very powerful as a hot air gun, barely hot enough for heat shrink, but more than enough for drying a film holder as long as you keep it far enough to not melt the 3D-print.
This was a fun video! Interesting idea with the selfie at the beginning. Did you just focus to the distance where you thought you would sit, or did you use a prop as a stand in for focus? I also thought, for some reason when you said you needed a lake to develop the film that you were going to tow the film behind your boat! Haha silly me! Thanks for a fun video and some very cool products!!!
I had a prop suitable for us apes. I have this bongo drum that is about the size of my head - so I put that where I thought my head would be and focus on that. Close enough :-)
I would love to try Instax in my Graflex or Mamiya but I hate the idea of having to buy an Instax camera and to load the film back into it just for developing. But they say the speed and pressure of the rollers is quite critical so I guess it would not be easy to build a manual roller arrangement for that.
@@ShootOnFilm Yes, I also wonder what's the problem, all the available Instax backs seem to use a cannibalized Instax camera for the development rollers. I have an old Polaroid pack film camera, I wonder if just pulling the Instax film through the rollers of that one would work? Still, an Instax Wide camera is not that expensive, it's mostly the hassle of inserting the film in the cassette, then loading that into the camera to develop compared to just passing the exposed film between a pair of rollers in a changing bag. It's a shame 4x5 Polaroid pack film is no longer made, film holders for that are cheap, plentiful and high quality. On the other hand if film was still made they would not probably be so cheap.
Dang. If I had a bit better budget I'd have to get one of those film holder/tray things and use it to do on-site immediate E-6 processing. Direct positive, in color, in under thirty minutes, on site... Temperature control looks like a challenge, though. Maybe RA-4 direct positive instead...
@@SilntObsvr That I don't know. You gotta ask the source. What I can tell is that it is not trivial to make a light-tight dark-slide mechanism without light seals. And here you must do it because the whole enchilada gets wet. So tight tolerances and some clever stuff are needed.
Oh, I like that - It's like the world's smallest darkroom. Not as easy as a Polaroid, but much more engaging.
It is a lot of fun!
The first 30 seconds stole the show that is a good thing. The fun and joy of taking a picture this way reflects the point of photography. Love it!
It is not all about the pictures -- it also must be fun to do!
I’ll never do any of this but it sure is entertaining to see you do it. You work hard for your pictures.
It's a sacrifice working day to day
For little money, just tips for pay
But it's worth it all
Just to hear them say that they care
🙂
Way cool! It’s small businesses like Jaggle Film that help maintain and increase interest in the current resurgence in film photography. I’ll definitely be buying one of these and extra cartridges. Thank you for showcasing this product!
My pleasure. I always want to try these exciting ideas!
Cool gadget. Love the selfie, Ari. That lens really creates interesting portraits!
Thanks thanks. Yeah, I love that lens!
Love it! Both the insert and the single frame dev tank!
They are really cool
I am glad to see You having fun doing these projects, and I am glad that You share them :) :) :)
Thanks thanks. Yeah, I love these things .....
Amazing!... What great way to begin a Saturdy morning !!!
Thanks for watching!
Thanks Ari. So in addition to all the gear and stuff I need to make a photograph, now I need a lake too!
You nailed the exposure on that direct positive selfie. I've found it to be a little tricky, probably just need to shoot more of it. The trouble is that it's been hard to find here in the USA for a long while. I've been playing with developing regular photo paper into a positive. It gives a different looking result that I rather like.
Thanks again for another great video!
Up here, there is a lake for everyone 🙂
Yeah, it is tricky to expose. Gotta measure light properly. And regular photo paper is surely an option. I actually thought about that and trying to make also the positives on the lake. But then I came to my senses ....
once again you are a magician!!!
:-) Just serving the mankind!
Now I want a 4x5 camera 🎥
Saturdays are better days since "next time something else" ☺️👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Thanks, thanks!
i like that Jaggle Self developing holder product. it will be good for shooting RA4 reversal so that i can develop on the spot and then make adjustment to my filters.
Why not! Sounds like a plan!
Very interesting Ari! I usually prewash my film, especially sheet film. But this should be possible with that setup too.
Me too. But it is totally possible with this! The whole lake is at our disposal :-)
Amazing. And "She Works Hard for the Money" as a bonus.
Ha haa :-) Thanks for watching!
Very cool! Reminiscent of Pinsta Pinhole Camera's dev process. I've been thinking of designing my own for Kingpin Cameras. This one opens another door of possibilities. Definitely into this kind of madness haha! Great video as always!
Yeah. There is something cool about getting the photo instantly ready. Not on the screen but on paper!
Thanks for watching :-)
Crazy but ingenious !!!
Here to serve :-)
Very nice show and tell demonstration of this clever product ( I mean the daylight development tank for your paper). I have experimented with my Stearman Press 445 development tank, and just put the paper into it -- can't put paper into the filmholders -- and just let it float while doing the development. Of course putting the paper from the filmholder into the tank has to be done in a changing bag. This is much easier! --- What I do not like about the Harman Positve Paper is the fact that the images are mirrored, but thats the way "instant" photography works (using Polaroid instead of Instax gives you mirrored images, too).
These things are a lot of fun! And I think images being mirrored adds to the charm :-)
Yes Officer. Of course thats Xtol In the lake!😅
It always is!
Great video as always Ari. Your videos always get me excited about film photography. I love your viewpiont on photography and creativity. You always keep things new and fresh. Always searching for new photography experiences. By the way, what watch are you wearing?
Thank you, thank you!!! My watch is a cheap Henri Sandoz & Fils. Must remember to wind it up every morning :-)
@@ShootOnFilm Thank you Ari! A fully mechanical watch that must be wound every day. I would expect nothing less than for you to have a watch which requires action on your part to keep it running. Fits your personality and ethos perfectly. I have been looking for a fully mechanical watch to purchase. It might just be yours. Thank you again for all you do. Watching your videos is one of the great joys of my life and makes me feel like I am watching an artist and innovator with a passion for new photography experiences. What a great way to live.
You could use it for E6. Really interesting idea. It's surprising there isn't more leakage between the film holder and the tray.
True. That would be fun to try!!!! It is actually a very well-engineered thing. It is also light tight without extra light seals as you cannot have such if everything gets wet. It is just tight tolerances.
Cool, thanks. Have you tried a hand held hair dryer? It helps with a Lab Box anyway. Have a great week!!
That's a good idea -- but I have no electricity on my boat :-)
@@ShootOnFilm You can buy cordless hot air guns. Not very powerful as a hot air gun, barely hot enough for heat shrink, but more than enough for drying a film holder as long as you keep it far enough to not melt the 3D-print.
Dear Ari, I want to fly to Finland just to hug Cookie ❤😂
Ha haa! So you saw the slight nervousness while the camera was too close? :-)
@@ShootOnFilm yes, but I just love Cookie❤️😘
This was a fun video! Interesting idea with the selfie at the beginning. Did you just focus to the distance where you thought you would sit, or did you use a prop as a stand in for focus? I also thought, for some reason when you said you needed a lake to develop the film that you were going to tow the film behind your boat! Haha silly me! Thanks for a fun video and some very cool products!!!
I had a prop suitable for us apes. I have this bongo drum that is about the size of my head - so I put that where I thought my head would be and focus on that. Close enough :-)
I would love to try Instax in my Graflex or Mamiya but I hate the idea of having to buy an Instax camera and to load the film back into it just for developing. But they say the speed and pressure of the rollers is quite critical so I guess it would not be easy to build a manual roller arrangement for that.
I've been thinking about trying to build a "squeezer". I mean how hard .... ;-)
I'm really happy with my lomograflok, in spite of his review.
@@ShootOnFilm Yes, I also wonder what's the problem, all the available Instax backs seem to use a cannibalized Instax camera for the development rollers. I have an old Polaroid pack film camera, I wonder if just pulling the Instax film through the rollers of that one would work?
Still, an Instax Wide camera is not that expensive, it's mostly the hassle of inserting the film in the cassette, then loading that into the camera to develop compared to just passing the exposed film between a pair of rollers in a changing bag.
It's a shame 4x5 Polaroid pack film is no longer made, film holders for that are cheap, plentiful and high quality. On the other hand if film was still made they would not probably be so cheap.
Dang. If I had a bit better budget I'd have to get one of those film holder/tray things and use it to do on-site immediate E-6 processing. Direct positive, in color, in under thirty minutes, on site... Temperature control looks like a challenge, though. Maybe RA-4 direct positive instead...
Yeah, there are possibilities ....
@@ShootOnFilm Now I'm wondering if the files are available to print my own -- or if I could reverse engineer the design...
@@SilntObsvr That I don't know. You gotta ask the source. What I can tell is that it is not trivial to make a light-tight dark-slide mechanism without light seals. And here you must do it because the whole enchilada gets wet. So tight tolerances and some clever stuff are needed.
Would a monobath type developer work with the positive print paper? If so, that would be very convenient.
A good question. I don't know.
thanks for the video. could you give us the link or the name of the manufacturer?
There is a link on the description page, but I'll put it here too: jaggle-photo.com/
is this how ended with Dali Easel and CATS! it took a lot a shots
I miss Finland
This was Monday. It's colder today but it's still pretty nice. The foliage is starting. Come on over!!
@@ShootOnFilm I have to return to Rovaniemi some day in winter
Cookie!!!!
🙂
where can I get the container to develope the film?
There is a link on the description page, but I'll put it here too: jaggle-photo.com/
brilliant thank you so much
Certainly some novel ideas there.
:-) Thanks for watching!
@@ShootOnFilm Thank you for making the videos.
poor mans polaroid 😀
:-)
Cookie was the star of this one. Sorry... Could feel her stress...
My camera was simply a bit too close :-)
He works hard for that money
I thought that was appropriate :-)