Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - Ask a few questions about lomo golden eye!

Ask a few questions about lomo golden eye!

1, golden eye is either the so-called lomo official or the camera produced by lomography. But lomo itself is not limited to any brand of camera. You can think that lomo is a photo style and a life attitude. Then you can actually take lomo photos with your mobile phone and SLR. So don't worry about whether golden eye is the official camera.

2. All cameras can shoot night scenes. If you don't want to use a slower shutter speed, you can only change to a higher ISO film.

3. Different movies have different styles:

Akfa: Red.

Kodak: Blue.

Fujifilm: Green.

If you want to make the picture more delicate, you can use a lower ISO. If you want coarse granularity, you can use a higher ISO (above 400). If you want more exaggerated graininess and color cast, you can use e-punch C (negative film), like Kodak E 100, which is more cost-effective. Lomo special film can also be used. Color mask is very serious.

What kind of film to use is not inevitable, it mainly depends on your own preferences. I suggest that you might as well buy more kinds of membranes at a time, and then choose one you like for a long time.

36 experiments. /200,200 refers to the sensitivity. For small fresh styles, use a negative with lower ISO. This movie will do. It is enough to expose a little fresh style, but not too much, it will become dead white if it overflows. The negative film is more tolerant of the bright part, which is contrary to the digital camera. Just pay a little attention.

4. What kind of membrane is used, as mentioned above. The printing factory can find a place convenient for you. I'll tell you one in Shenzhen. You can't really use Shenzhen to develop. Ask when you develop it, no matter what kind of photos you develop. Otherwise, some strange photos may be rejected.

5. Long exposure is recommended on the tripod.

Multiple exposures, for example, if you want to expose two photos, then each photo will be reduced by one exposure. If multiple exposures are required, each exposure is 1/3. You can measure the light with an ordinary camera.