Author: honcho
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Holga Hike Today
Today’s the day!!! Both Spring & the Holga Hike are here. Shake off those Winter blues by getting outdoors with your Holga and capturing the pleasant pastels of Spring (or lovely black & whites, if you’re so inclined…). Just remember to submit your image by April 5th. I was already out & about with my […]
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Chatter, Color Film, Diana F, Hawaii, Kodak Ektar 100, Lo-fi, O'ahu
Sometimes the magic gives you toads
Somewhere along the way, my vintage Diana F developed a dastardly light leak in the upper left-hand side of the frame (lower-right image). As opposed to a beneficial or relatively benign light leak, I’d say this one ruined several rolls of film from Hawaii, except ‘ruined’ is such an ugly word. How about I just […]
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Brownie Hawkeye Flash, Chatter, Ilford HP5 Plus, Lo-fi
My Favorite Photographer
So apparently I’m not above a little bit of open pandering for free film. UPDATE 03.16.10: I didn’t win the free film. Oh well. Who is my favorite photographer? I’m not necessarily sure I’ve ever truly pondered that question before. Of course, my mind goes to such luminaries as Ansel Adams, Alfred Stieglitz, Andreas Feininger […]
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Brownie Hawkeye Flash, Color Film, Hawaii, Kodak Ektar 100, Lo-fi, O'ahu, Trees
BHF – Waikiki Sunset
Another image from my trip to O’ahu this past December. My wife & I were hurrying along, trying to get from the hotel to the House Without a Key for cocktails, after spending a little bit too long at the beach that day. We had just started our mile-long stroll when I startled my wife […]
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First Annual Holga Hike
Ah… the signs of Spring’s imminent arrival keep popping up around me: Temperatures are rising and the snow is beginning to melt, robins are roosting and geese are returning from their southernly sojourn, and probably most tell-tale, I finally wore my Chucks outside for the first time this year; although on March 20th, the first […]
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Chatter, Cross processed, Fuji Velvia 100f, Holga, Lo-fi, Slide Film
Smashing Magazine
Smashing Magazine has an article on ‘Toy Cameras’ featuring a piece of my Holga work. The article is a general survey of toy cameras for the uninitiated (generally sticking to the Lomography retail line-up) and includes several digital means to reproduce the toy camera and Polaroid aesthetics. While the semanticist in me disagrees with the […]
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Brownie Hawkeye Flash, flipped lens, How-to, Kodak Ektar 100, Lo-fi, Rollei Retro, Vintage Cameras
How to flip a Brownie Hawkeye Flash lens
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I've noticed a lot of search traffic hitting my site specifically looking for information on how to flip the lens of a Kodak Brownie Hawkeye Flash (BHF). While there are probably multitudes of other resources on the interwebs, I figure I'll just throw my two-cents out there.
For those who don't know, the BHF is a black bakelite beauty with a top-down viewfinder, single element meniscus lens, shutter speed somewhere around 1/30 to 1/60 & a bulb setting, while it lacks a tripod mount, it has a nifty handle. In it's heyday, the BHF was a very popular camera. Your grandparents most likely had one. Nowadays, you can find them cheaply at thrift stores, flea markets, garage sales, and eBay, or for a higher premium decorating shelves in antique stores & hipster boutiques. I, personally, got mine for free on Craigslist thanks to a kind-hearted Samaritan who was donating several cameras to anyone who could justify receiving one. I simply wrote “I'll use it.” It arrived in the mail a couple days later and I've been enthralled with it ever since. Anywho, an unmodified BHF takes a relatively normal photograph, but something magical happens when you flip the lens. It's like the soft focus of a vintage Diana multiplied to the Nth degree. The lens' focal point shifts from infinity to about 3 feet in the center, while the edges just melt away into blurry goodness. The effect can be quite surreal. Flipping the lens of a BHF is actually a simple procedure with a very low-risk of permanently #@$%-ing anything up and is easily reversible. That said, I assume no responsibility with these directions if you somehow manage to accidentally bork your favorite family heirloom. Ready? Let's get flipping. Read More -
Chatter, Color Film, Diana F, Hawaii, Kodak Ektar 100, Landscapes, Lo-fi, O'ahu
Pali Pano
I’m starting to process some of the multitudes of images I captured on O’ahu this past December. The above photograph was taken at a tourist pull-off on the Pali Highway, a scenic route that takes you over (and through) the mountains from Honolulu to Kailua on the windward coast. By its nature, it’s a shot […]
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Cure for the Winter Doldrums?
I’ve been feeling inspirationally frustrated. I’m overwhelmed the sheer backlog of work just waiting to be processed, but at the same time I feel emotionally stymied that I haven’t shot anything new since the beginning of December. I lack coherence. I’m no longer sure if I’m progressing or regressing. I need anti-newton glass, an air […]
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TOYCAM Book Project
For the past year or so, I’ve had the privilege to be part of a project within the Toycamera.com community to create a new book that explores toy camera photographers & the lo-fi images they create. The brainchild of Andrew, of Green St Photography fame, he gathered a crack-team of toy camera enthusiasts as interviewers, […]
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