I got a roll of Pan-F 50 with a film order. How would you shoot such slow film in daylight?
How is 50 slow? All the Velvia I have is 50 and it works just fine.
I would shoot it with twice the exposure of 100 speed film but that's just me.
>>225260Tripod/really bright/mirror lockup.
>>225292srsly?I would shoot it with half the exposure of 25 speed film but that's just me.
>>225305really? I'd set my camera on a tripod and shoot at a four times the exposure of 200 speed film but that's just me.
>>225356are you serious? I'd get my camera on a mono pod and shoot at a third the exposure of 150 speed film, but thats just me.
this thread is made of lulz and mudkips
You probably need a noctilux.
Really? I'd take it out of the wrapper, feed it to a small child, and watch them choke. But that's just me.
>>225356Really? I'd encase my camera in a block of clear epoxy, bolt it to the floor, and shoot with 1/10,000 the exposure of a daguerrotype plate.
50 speed film won't be a big deal in broad daylight. try f/3.5 or larger and you should still get a shutter speed better than 1/250 depending on how bright the scene is
i'll push it by a stop.but 50ASA isn't that slow if in daylight. (re: Kodachrome 25)
>>225698Son, I'd shoot at 100 ISO and get it pulled. (ie. Delta 100)
>>225743That's pretty stupid. Pulling a film will not change its sensitivity like pushing would, it changes the contrast of the film.
>>225743Shooting 50 ASA film at 100 is pushing, not pulling. FYI.
>>225762He's talking about using Delta 100 'pulled' to 50, instead of using 50 ASA film.
>>225764yes, but whats the point when OP already has a roll of 50 ASA
>>225766No point at all, it's just a ridiculous post.