Holga multi-exposure (and some thoughts)


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sloth

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First the thoughts. If you want to see the pics scroll down and skip this bit :D

I read a short introduction to the Holga which started something "If you thought your eyes were open, in reality they've been closed until now". I'm 'm a hobbyist, not a pro. I am coming from the world of autofocus, of digital precision, where we are trying way too hard to make every shot perfect, to get that keeper we want to print poster-sized and hang on the wall. Color matters, sharpness matters, depth of field, perfect exposure, and even advanced techniques when the cameras run out of dynamic range. We look to full frame sensors, exotic glass lenses, 14-bit ADC's and pester our respective manufacturers for when something bigger and better is coming out. Rule of thirds, composition, framing, previsualization, postprocessing. Getting a headache already? :)

And I feel along the journey to master the camera I've lost something special. I look at my early shots taken as a noob with my Canon 350D and 18-55 kit lens. I didn't really care what anybody else thought of my photography in those days, I just shot whatever I liked, whenever I liked, with whatever settings I felt like (usually Program AE - yes, god forbid an expert photographer even dare to consider P!!). But I liked those shots. I got fewer 'fantastic' shots but I liked the feel, perhaps the innocence of those shots. And I could never get it back.

......until now.

I never imagined that putting just a few rolls of film through a $65 toy camera could give me back my vision. I am probably never going to win any competitions with these shots but at the same time they recapture everything I have lost. I look at the black and white scans and I have never been happier with what I have been seeing - and that is the most important thing to me. :)

The Holga has very little technology. In fact it's hardly technological. It's amazing the shutter even works the way it's built. (the aperture doesn't work :D). But precisely because of that, it opens my mind, it teaches me to break the rules, it teaches me to SEE creatively once again instead of trying to go for the same old boring 'perfect' shots. It really shows you that the power of photography, cliche as it sounds, really IS ALL IN THE MIND. And you don't even need a Holga. Some of my favorite shots last week came from a Canon A-1 loaded with B&W film but shot Holga-style from the hip and without looking through the finder. It really all is in the mind.

Thank you, Alternative Photographers, for giving me back the magic in photography :)
 

Photos:

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First the thoughts. If you want to see the pics scroll down and skip this bit :D

I read a short introduction to the Holga which started something "If you thought your eyes were open, in reality they've been closed until now". I'm 'm a hobbyist, not a pro. I am coming from the world of autofocus, of digital precision, where we are trying way too hard to make every shot perfect, to get that keeper we want to print poster-sized and hang on the wall. Color matters, sharpness matters, depth of field, perfect exposure, and even advanced techniques when the cameras run out of dynamic range. We look to full frame sensors, exotic glass lenses, 14-bit ADC's and pester our respective manufacturers for when something bigger and better is coming out. Rule of thirds, composition, framing, previsualization, postprocessing. Getting a headache already? :)

And I feel along the journey to master the camera I've lost something special. I look at my early shots taken as a noob with my Canon 350D and 18-55 kit lens. I didn't really care what anybody else thought of my photography in those days, I just shot whatever I liked, whenever I liked, with whatever settings I felt like (usually Program AE - yes, god forbid an expert photographer even dare to consider P!!). But I liked those shots. I got fewer 'fantastic' shots but I liked the feel, perhaps the innocence of those shots. And I could never get it back.

......until now.

I never imagined that putting just a few rolls of film through a $65 toy camera could give me back my vision. I am probably never going to win any competitions with these shots but at the same time they recapture everything I have lost. I look at the black and white scans and I have never been happier with what I have been seeing - and that is the most important thing to me. :)

The Holga has very little technology. In fact it's hardly technological. It's amazing the shutter even works the way it's built. (the aperture doesn't work :D). But precisely because of that, it opens my mind, it teaches me to break the rules, it teaches me to SEE creatively once again instead of trying to go for the same old boring 'perfect' shots. It really shows you that the power of photography, cliche as it sounds, really IS ALL IN THE MIND. And you don't even need a Holga. Some of my favorite shots last week came from a Canon A-1 loaded with B&W film but shot Holga-style from the hip and without looking through the finder. It really all is in the mind.

Thank you, Alternative Photographers, for giving me back the magic in photography :)

Well said and more well done! I always believe in final product not the process. I can boldly proclaim that the Holga is a solid camera which I will always enjoy using.
 

Thank you, Alternative Photographers, for giving me back the magic in photography :)

You shld thank yourself for getting the little black box of joy
 

i gotta fully agree with what you said
:thumbsup:
nice set btw :)
 

i will never sell my holga unless i intend to purchase another one ;)....

nice shots on the holga some of very dreamy....:D
 

Thanks all :)

Yes, the Holga is quite unique.. you can't get this combination of 'feel' anywhere else. No regrets spending $$ on it. Best value for money indeed :thumbsup::thumbsup:

Can't wait for my slides to get back from the lab tomorrow. And will definitely shoot more this weekend.
 

well said *thumbs up*

and nice shots too!

the merlion like swimming hahahaha
 

i will never sell my holga unless i intend to purchase another one ;)....

Haha.. i probably wun sell even if i m getting another one.. probably convert into a pinholga! :bsmilie:
 

Buy another Holga and mod.. they are affordable enough that you can do that :D

I might do the aperture mod. Slightly overcast Singapore days need a bit more light if I want to use ISO 100 slide film.
 

already did the aperture mod on my holga... will only buy a new one when the flash on the current one dies on me then i go buy the 120n and maybe modify the old one into a pinhole...:bsmilie::bsmilie:
 

one thing's for sure, lomo is fun! :) that's all that matters isn't it? so long as you find something fun

for some, it's getting sharp shots, for others, it's just shooting what they like.. and YOUR SHOT is always YOUR SHOT, it will always be special to you

nice series, btw, love the merlion one esp
 

goodness me u all talk too deep...

i cannot grasp haha but yes each holga has its own uniqueness...
 

hi sloth, i love your photos.. could you tell me what exactly what b&w film did you use for your holga? my last film came out entirely blank and i have no idea why...
 

hi sloth, i love your photos.. could you tell me what exactly what b&w film did you use for your holga? my last film came out entirely blank and i have no idea why...

So far, I've been shooting Kodak Tri-X 400 for the black and white stuff. I'm finding that 400 is a good speed film for the Holga. If you use too 'slow' a film your images tend to come out very dark. Look for something at 400.

Blank.. I assume you've already taken off your lens cap, so that can't be the problem. Just wanted to cover everything. Many Holga sites seem to remind their users of this.

To check if your Holga is 'firing' properly, take off the back (with no film of course!), point the lens at something bright, say a window or computer screen, and look through the back of the camera as you press the shutter. Set the Holga to "N" mode instead of "B" (some do not have B, then don't worry about it). Look into the center of the camera, where the spring is.

You should see a small white circle appear for a very brief moment. If you don't see it, press the shutter a few times and you should be able to. If you see it, your Holga's shutter is functioning properly. This dry-firing enables us to check if it's working without wasting film.

If your Holga has a B mode, set to B, look through center, hold down the shutter - the white circle will appear as long as you hold it down.

Also turn the winder knob to see if the winder is working properly. You should see the roll turning.

That's about all I can think of at the moment.. hope you manage to solve the problem soon!
 

hey thanks for troubleshooting but there isn't anything wrong with my holga because i used a colour film after that and it turned out the way its supposed to be. i'm wondering if it was the film? i forgot the ISO but its an Ilford 120film that a friend bought from Ruby's.. it was my first B&W film. thanks anyway! :D
 

hey thanks for troubleshooting but there isn't anything wrong with my holga because i used a colour film after that and it turned out the way its supposed to be. i'm wondering if it was the film? i forgot the ISO but its an Ilford 120film that a friend bought from Ruby's.. it was my first B&W film. thanks anyway! :D

You're welcome, glad to hear the Holga is working fine.

What does the negative film look like? Is the whole roll, including edges of the film completely black? If it looks like one solid black sheet then the whole roll may have been accidentally exposed to light.

If the whole roll is transparent, that means the roll was not exposed at all. Could be a winding problem, the film failed to advance properly, or something like that.

A properly exposed and developed negative should have transparent borders/edges and a square in the center with your image. You should be able to read the lettering along the edges, for example ILFORD DELTA PRO 400 (lettering will vary depending on type of film).
 

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