First Encounter with Agfa APX 400

Morpheuse aka Aqmal given me this roll of 120mm Agfa APX 400 few months back, and I'm so kedekut to use the film. Come to think about it, what the heck? Better try the film 1st... during our picnic theme session, i load this film in my Hasselblad 500c/m and politely (konon2...wahahaaha) ask Nurul to pose for me. Since my Paterson already at home, i'm quite confidence to develop the film. Whats the recipe to develop the film lah? Lucky I got my mobile source reference...not google! Morpheuse aka Aqmal give me his recipe.. ahahhaha (thanks abang...) TMax developer with 1:4 ratio room temperture. Develop for 14 minutes with 30secs agitation for the 1st minute and 8secs/minute agitation for the subsequent minutes. Thanks to morpheuse i'm addicted this Agfa APX... farkhhh!!! damn expensive pulak tu......

Nurul in monochrome
Hasselblad 500c/m

Faces of her
Hasselblad 500c/m

TT Film
Hasselblad 500c/m (pic taken by padilopadilan)

National Mosque
Nikon F5, Nikkor 18-35 f/4-5.6

Fun at the Park

Last week I have a discussion with fellow photographer Lordmint to shoot a picnic theme and we have 3 models willing to this session with us. We invited morpheuse aka Aqmal to join our session and we have a blast doing this yersterday. Morpheuse came along with his gadgets and he really helping us to get the job done.... kuddos to the team.

Photographers: Sarip, Lordmint, Morpheuse and Paklan
Assistant: Yong
Models: Ayu, Nurul and Alin
Make up Artist: Siew Yin

Ayu
Ayu in Green
Nikon D200, 1xMetz (power 1/1) with DIY Diffuser as key light, 1xSB800 (power 1/2) as rim light, triggered with Pocket Wizard

Nurul
Nurul @ the park
Hasselblad 500c/m, Carl Zeiss 80mm f/2.8 PlanarT*, Kodak Pro160

Picnic @ the park
Picnic @ the park
Hasselblad 500c/m, Carl Zeiss 80mm f/2.8 PlanarT*, Kodak Pro160
1xMetz (power 1/1) with DIY Diffuser as key light, 1xSB800 (power 1/2), triggered with Pocket Wizard



Me, AP and Paterson

It's been a while since i have some problems with my developing tank. AP developing tank just a pain in the arse if you ask me... So, the solutions? Just 1... get yourself a nice Paterson tank. morpheuse aka aqmal helped me to get this from EvilBay and i just received it today... damn happy... but i still need to find my mojo before processing my film tonite... *winks*

Got this...

27022010007

from him

27022010009

Damn!!!! i can load two 120mm films at 1 time... ahahhaa.. not with AP tank, that for sure....

27022010010

Experimenting with Stand Development

Since i was so badly scratched (only God knows why :D), i got some time to figure this thing out. I'm not really familiar with the stand development process, but i've seen the final results from a fellow photographer (Tuan Majdi and Shaf) and morpheuse aka aqmal (morpheuse@livejournal.com) have giving me some pointers on how to make this process work. Some reference from http://www.covingtoninnovations.com/hc110/ also helped me through out this process. I went for an outing with Ajeep, Zul, Abg Majdi and Maestro to KTM's building to captured some night scene of the legendary railway station. Armed with Hasselblad 500c/m and Hasselblad SWC (loan from morpheuse) and a roll of Ilford HP5 400 pushed to 3200 i've tried to make my composition of this wonderful architecture.

My stand development recipe
Kodak HC110 dilution 1:119
Ilford Rapid Fixer dilution 1:4

1st minute agitation
developing time 1 hour and 15 minutes
fixed at 5minutes

and this is the only frame that really works. I still can recover the details on the shadows. Its not a good results but for a 1st timer, it quite interesting.... definitely will do this more often...

KTM
Hasselblad 500c/m CZ 80mm f/2.8 Planar T* Ilford HP5 400 pushed to 3200

Sincere just Not Good Enough

Lights


Life seems just unfair,

You gave all that you can be to be the best,

You gave all your heart just to pleased her,

But it seems just not enough for her.


But when you are cruel to her,

You don't treat her right,

She will miss you, she will adore you,

And the same time she's looking for shoulder to cry,

And i'm the one who gave my shoulder to her.


It seems like when you sincere to love her,

Sincere just not Good Enough...


Just Looking

Just Looking

by Stereophonics



There's things I want

There's things I think I want

There's things I have

There's things I wanna have

Do I want the dreams?

The ones were forced to see?


Do I want the perfect wife?

But perfect, ain't quite right

Shopping every day, take it back the next break

They say the more you fly

The more you risk your life


I'm just looking

I'm not buying

I'm just looking

Keeps me smiling


A house I've seen

Another coulda' been

You drenched my head

And said what I said

You said that life is what you make of it

Yet most of us just fake


I'm just looking

I'm not buying

I'm just looking

Keeps me smiling


I'm just looking

I'm not buying

Ooh, I'm just looking

Keeps me trying


I'm just looking

I'm not buying

Ooh, I'm just looking

Keeps me smiling


There's things I want

There's things I think I want

There's things I have

There's things I wanna have

They say the more you fly

The more you risk your life

Well I'm just looking

I'm not buying

I'm just looking

Keeps me smiling


Couple

Nikon D200 Tokina 11-16mm, Bagan Lalang Beach

Life's Journey

Life's Journey

by © Tim Sommer


What happened, where did the time go

My memories, they all seem so long ago

Blurry visions of how the world was

Surrealistic reminiscences of what has come to pass


Present flies by, becoming the past

Days race by, all going so fast

Making the first steps into the last chapter

And I’m afraid, time will only go faster


Remembering the forming of my band of brothers

The beginning of an era like no other

Giving each other a chance to survive

United in pain and joy, united for life


Times change, we all aren’t the same

Living in the shadows of our former fame

Following our destiny, pursuing our visions

One makes his escape, the other stuck in addictions


But wherever we are, whatever we need

Wherever life’s journey may lead

Always we remember the times we lived before

And the unity they stood for


United for life


Brotherhood

Nikon FM2 LuckySHD 100



Where The Streets Have No Name

Where The Streets Have No Name
by U2

I wanna run

I want to hide

I wanna tear down the walls

That hold me inside

I wanna reach out

And touch the flame

Where the streets have no name


I wanna feel sunlight on my face

I see the dust cloud disappear without a trace

I wanna take shelter from the poison rain

Where the streets have no name


Where the streets have no name

Where the streets have no name

We're still building

Then burning down love,

Burning down love

And when I go there

I go there with you

It's all I can do


The city's a flood

And our love turns to rust

We're beaten and blown by the wind

Trampled in dust

I'll show you a place

High on a desert plain

Where the streets have no name


Where the streets have no name

Where the streets have no name

We're still building

Then burning down love,

Burning down love

And when I go there

I go there with you

It's all I can do


Our love turns to rust

We're beaten and blown by the wind

Blown by the wind

Oh yes, in dust

See our love turn to rust

And we're beaten and blown by the wind

Blown by the wind

Oh, when I go there

I go there with you

It's all I can do


*location: Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia*


Life As You Seen It

Nikon D200


Busking

Hasselblad 500c/m Ilford Delta 3200


I was trying to sing to her...but...she walked away

Nikon F3 Kodak Portra 160VC


Responsibility

Nikon F3 Ilford PanF 50


Expecting

Nikon F3 Kodak PX-125


slept

Nikon FM2 Lucky SHD100


Jual Obat Kuat

Nikon FM2 Lucky SHD100


Got Milk?

Nikon FM2 Lucky SHD100




Nikon F5: The Vicious Nikon Camera

Recently i got a new family member in my dry box.. the legendary Nikon F5, it almost a year i'm dreaming to get this wonderful machine, and thanks to brader Ted Adnan coz giving me the chance to own this awesome cam.... this is Ken Rockwell's reviews about this amazing cam..

"Why do some people consider the F5 to be the world's best camera? (personally I prefer the Mamiya 6)

1.) The color matrix meter. The color matrix meter for the first time allows the meter to ensure light colors like my favorite yellow come out as light as they should, and that dark colors like red come out as dark as they should. I have to compensate my F100 manually for this. Also since the F5 has over 1,000 meter segments it can predict the subject and choose the correct metering algorithm far more accurately than any other camera.

The 3D properties are meaningless.

The meter in a camera is almost the only property of a camera that has any effect on the final photograph. The meter is very important, and the F5 has the best there is. This meter alone could make the F5 the world's best camera.

2.) Durability. The F5 is built as tough as a tank, and more precisely to boot. Unlike amateur cameras like the Canon EOS-1V and Nikon F100 which have film rewind forks and God knows what else made of plastic, the F5 seems as sturdy as any Nikon ever made.

When the plastic rewind fork of an amateur camera like the EOS-1V or F100 breaks you cannot get the film out of the camera unless you have access to a darkroom. That means you cannot use the camera any more until you have both access to a darkroom to remove the film and then have the camera repaired. The F5 is also unique among current AF cameras in having a manual rewind crank, so you can get your film out even with dead batteries. If you are a professional journalist this is important, since your photos are worthless a day later if they are stuck inside the camera until you can get back to the hotel after dark and miss the FedEx pickup. Of course pro journalists all shoot the D1H today, not old film cameras like the F5.

3.) Speed. The AF motor in the F5 is brutally fast, and the AF-S motor driver is also beastly. It probably can rip a discount lens like a Sigma to shreds. The AF speed is super fast to support the fast frame rates of the F5. The amateur photo mag reviewers just don't get this; go play with an F5 and see how it beats the lens around mercilessly to focus fast enough to get your shots at 8 frames per second. Don't be an idiot and put discount glass on your F5.

DISCUSSION

I have almost never photographed with this camera, but have played with it many times. People keep asking me my opinions, so here goes. Be warned, if I ever actually took one out and ran film through it my opinions may be very, very different. Even worse, I would probably fall in love with the color matrix meter and then have to haul this beast around with me all the time.

Durability

This camera very quickly squelches any bellyaching about Nikon no longer making "real" cameras. It seems to be hewn from a solid block of metal. It makes you want to use it for a hammer and makes you feel guilty putting anything other than a real lens on it.

AF Speed

AF speed is faster than any other Nikon. In fact, you may feel sorry for your lenses being beaten around so fast as it focused. Honest, one friend was afraid that a non-Nikon brand lens was going to be destroyed by the F5's brutally fast focusing. Just as well, I never have figured out why some amateurs are stupid enough to put discount glass on an F5. Too many people forget that the camera is for your convenience; it has nothing to do with the technical quality of the photo, unlike the lens which is far more important.

Too many amateurs ask me and then go right ahead and waste all the money they spent on an F5 by trying to save money and putting some Tamron, Spooginar, Tokina, RectalPro, Kenko, Quantaray, Sigma, Cambron or some other discount lens on this camera. Don't.

Inferior, outdated ergonomics

I find the F5 ergonomics less convenient than the F100. That's because the F5 is the oldest camera in Nikon's lineup.

The F5 viewfinder has weak selected focus area indicators compared to the F100 and others.

The power switch and metering mode switch requires two hands to operate. This was done with expensive mechanical lock-outs to ensure that a professional journalist doesn't accidentally knock a setting and loose a day's shooting, but for me these are simply a pain.

There is no simple lock for the AF area selector switch as there is on the F100 and N80 and D1X and D70 etc. On the F5 you have to go into a custom function to lock and unlock it. Otherwise you will go bananas knocking it by accident. The N80 is newer and better.

The F5's AE lock button cannot be set to hold the reading after one releases the button, as one can do on the F100. Therefore one needs to hold this button while exposing, and I fear that I'd blur slow speed shots by having to keep pressure on this button while exposing.

The F5 cannot be set to rewind automatically at the end of the roll as the other cameras can. You have to tell it to do this by hand each time, after which it rips right through it faster than any other Nikon.

So who buys the F5 in 2005?

I doubt anyone buys new F5s anymore.

Rich amateurs are dumping theirs for digital, so by all means go snap up a bargain on a like-new used camera.

Good photographers don't often buy F5s. The people who usually buy them are rich amateurs who confuse camera quality with image quality, or newspaper photo departments who used to issue the F5s to their photographers.

The F5 is for sports and wildlife. Only misguided rich people buy it for landscapes and portraits. News replaced the F5 with the D1 series years ago. For still subjects any camera is OK, and for the price of the F5 you could buy a far superior medium or large format camera if you broadened your outlook.

Professionals don't often buy F5s either. The photographer from your local newspaper turned in the F5 he was issued by his employer years ago when the D1s replaced them. Ask him: he'll probably admit that he'd never be able to afford an F5 on his own pay. F5s made sense for newspapers because the PJs love to beat the hell out of other people's cameras. The F5s are built to take this abuse, and are warranted for three years, even under professional abuse, unlike the one year warranty on every other Nikon camera. This warranty alone justified the cost of this camera for journalism.

Today for journalism the D1 series replaces the old F5. If you need film quality for still subjects, as I've said before, skip 35mm entirely and shoot a larger formatcamera. If you need immediacy for news then get a D1H. I'm unsure what purpose the F5 serves any more.

Nikon was running a rebate on the F5 when I bought my F100 at full price in September 1999. An F5 would have been about the same price. I chose the F100 because of its much lighter weight and better ergonomics.

The F5 weighs a ton and a half. Unlike the Canon EOS-1V, you cannot use anything smaller than the permanently attached 8-AA battery holder. The F5 is not a camera to be taken along for fun on vacation.

The only genuinely useful things I can recall the F5 doing for me that is not done on the other Nikon cameras is the unique color Matrix meter and the ability to set manual shutter speeds as long as 30 minutes without an idiotic external electronic cable release. I bought the idiotic cable release for my F100, so I don't need that long exposure feature on the F5. Everything else, like interchangeable viewfinders, you simply don't need. I will admit again that if I tried the F5 more I just might fall in love with the color meter and then have to haul it around everywhere.

The size and weight are why I don't use it today.

To be honest, this was a camera for people shooting action and news professionally and who need photos on film. It is not for landscapes. If you are a professional journalist you really ought to have a D1x or D1H instead, and if you are shooting still subjects you ought to have a larger format camera. Therefore, I don't see a lot of reason for the F5 other than people who need film for sports. This illustrates the difference between a great camera and one that I'd actually want to use for making photographs."


sample taken from this awesome cam
Nikon F5 Nikkor 50mm f/1.8 Lucky SHD 100 pushed to 400
HC110 1:47 | Ilford Rapid Fixer

Spot Metering | Aperture Priority Mode
system of a down?

Bonda

Nikon F5, Nikkor 80-200 f/2.8 Kodak BW400CN

Matrix Metering | Manual Mode

Rock The World 9

Rock The World 9

so..? what do you think about this cam....?
awesome eh?

Snips Hair Academy Photoshoot Session

Just another session taken for my friend's portfolio. He's an old time buddy, Nasrol the straight hair stylist. He did a few hairdo and ask me to shoot his models.... it was a fun session for us... especially with the models Michelle,Izni and Suzie... crazy gals lah diorang... ehehhee.. Cheers!

Michelle

Suzy & Izni

Izni

Suzy

The Man Himself Nasrol my old time buddy
Nasrol

The Guilty Parties
What a day.....

I Shoot Model Too.....

To be frank, i'm not really into model shoot. Its obvious i can't communicate with female model. Its not that im scared but im just too nervous to communicate with them..ngahahhahaa....kinda pathetic, but it just me lah...*winks* These some are the shots taken with fellow The Bears Photographer Group.

The talented Miss Nurul (she laughed at me when my hands are shivering while doing this session..damn!!!)

The Red Kebaya Theme
Red Kebaya

The X-Files Theme
X-Files

The talented Miss Ayu
Ayu in the Woods

Ayu