The video adds useful information to the inventory of shortcomings of Phoenix 200. Now we see that it suffers from major reciprocity failure, something no one has previously mention s far as I know.
Im new to film, and your channel. I love your photography style, im enjoying your tours of these unique film stocks! Im interested in learning how to use light meters, so its super helpful when you narrate your settings for each photo. Thanks for sharing your art, its wonderful! 😇
The more i shoot and edit this film, the more I enjoy it. This is cool to see it shot at night, not something I would have tried with it, but now I might!
Alex from Shaka1277 has done some pretty extensive research on phoneix 200 and say the base iso is really 123 and that shooting the film at 100 and pulling one stop to reduce contrast and grain and improve shodow detail tremendously
Love the video! Keep ‘em coming. Really cool photos as ever. They are all so vivid, vibrant, and you really have a great eye for the wonderful little beautiful details all around us…. Also cool to see you experimenting too.
I shot Phoenix for the first time (120) a week or so ago -- developed and scanned at home -- and I loved the results. I haven't tried it in 35mm but your shots look great 👍 Edit- I also had a long exposure shot at night turn a strong, yellow light into a bright green. I thought it was some kind of fluke because I hadn't seen anyone else shoot it in the dark!
Nice! Very cool that you did a longer exposure too. I thought it was a fluke too until it kept happening on every roll. Definitely a fascinating characteristic of the film.
@@ChristopherLange122 Thanks so much Chris! Sounds like a great idea. Off the top of my head I remember a really lovely print you made years ago, a small black and white one with a car parked, overlooking a hill and a neon Fred Tschida creation above it…but of course would love to see any newer work!
The video adds useful information to the inventory of shortcomings of Phoenix 200. Now we see that it suffers from major reciprocity failure, something no one has previously mention s far as I know.
Im new to film, and your channel. I love your photography style, im enjoying your tours of these unique film stocks! Im interested in learning how to use light meters, so its super helpful when you narrate your settings for each photo. Thanks for sharing your art, its wonderful! 😇
I’m glad, thank you! I hope sharing my exposure settings makes nighttime a little less intimidating to photograph too.
the color shifting to red at the sunrise is a super interesting effect. it looks super cool
The more i shoot and edit this film, the more I enjoy it. This is cool to see it shot at night, not something I would have tried with it, but now I might!
@@elmoonfire I feel that way too. Nighttime is tough but I think it’s worth trying out!
Alex from Shaka1277 has done some pretty extensive research on phoneix 200 and say the base iso is really 123 and that shooting the film at 100 and pulling one stop to reduce contrast and grain and improve shodow detail tremendously
Good tips! I imagine pulling would work really well for nighttime.
These videos are awesome! Keep em coming!
Thanks so much!
Love the video! Keep ‘em coming. Really cool photos as ever. They are all so vivid, vibrant, and you really have a great eye for the wonderful little beautiful details all around us…. Also cool to see you experimenting too.
Thank you!
Love that shot at 5:45 🤌🏼
Thank you!! I love the color palette in that one.
I shot Phoenix for the first time (120) a week or so ago -- developed and scanned at home -- and I loved the results. I haven't tried it in 35mm but your shots look great 👍
Edit- I also had a long exposure shot at night turn a strong, yellow light into a bright green. I thought it was some kind of fluke because I hadn't seen anyone else shoot it in the dark!
Nice! Very cool that you did a longer exposure too. I thought it was a fluke too until it kept happening on every roll. Definitely a fascinating characteristic of the film.
That photo 9:18 just doesn't seem real. Incredible!
Thank you! It surprised me too!
Alternate title: “The Phoenix Lights."
@@sesa2984 I like it!
Those scenes at the lake are some of my favorite photographs you’ve shared Jon. I really love them…interested in doing a print trade?
@@ChristopherLange122 Thanks so much Chris! Sounds like a great idea. Off the top of my head I remember a really lovely print you made years ago, a small black and white one with a car parked, overlooking a hill and a neon Fred Tschida creation above it…but of course would love to see any newer work!