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Water lilies at the Brooklyn Botanical Garden Orchid Show, April 5, 2014. Taken with the Nikon D610 + AF-S Zoom NIKKOR 24-85mm f/3.5-4.5 G ED VR. 1/600 s @ f/5.6 -0.67, ISO 800.
Showing posts with label Holga .5x Wide Angle Adapter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Holga .5x Wide Angle Adapter. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Day for Night: The Holga HL-N

Boothbay Harbor, Maine
Nikon D90 + Holga HL-N
One thing that the Holga HL-N seems to excel at is taking dark pictures. It’s tricky judging the exposure by chimping, and as you work your way down to the correct shutter speed, you invariably wind up with images like this…dark and underexposed.

Underexposure is one of those hollywood tricks that allows night scenes to be filmed during full or partial daylight. With plenty of light available, you control how much of it you use. Instead of trying to fight the Holga HL-N, you can use its unique characteristics to your advantage.

This image is a throwaway, unless you view it in a different “light”. Scanning quickly through my images in Adobe Bridge, I forgot I shot this with the Holga and thought it was a night scene. Upon closer inspection, it has some very pleasing aesthetic qualities. Using Adobe Camera Raw, I opened it up slightly with Brightness, then pulled the darks back down with Contrast to achieve the same overall brightness level but with more luminescent highlights. The image is quite sharp for a single-element meniscus lens.

If I wished to intentionally create a night scene during daylight or dusk, I could easily reach for this lens, knowing its unique characteristics.

Head of the Harbor, Boothbay Harbor, Maine
Nikon D90 + Holga HL-N + Holga .5X Wide Angle Adapter
This image is more of a “normal” exposure for this lens. Interestingly, it was shot with the .5X Wide Adapter, which in my opinion doesn’t make that much of a difference. It certainly doesn’t look 45mm to me. But because of the way the HL-N is designed, it does not significantly reduce the vignetting effect, which is a good thing. It also doesn’t seem to degrade the sharpness significantly.


Sunday, October 17, 2010

Shooting 35mm with the Holga 120

There’s a 35mm film adapter kit available for the Holga 120 which enables you to take standard 3:2 35mm frames. It includes a 36mm x 24mm mask, and a back with the frame counter window covered up. The mask has two plastic brackets on the left side to center the film cartridge, and guides to ensure that the film remains centered on the mask opening. You use the original 120 take-up spool with no additional modifications.


Saturday, October 16, 2010

The Annual Autumn Tradition

Today my family and I will be embarking on our annual autumn tradition; a pumkin-picking pilgrimage to Alstedes in Dover. It seems the perfect opportunity load my Holga 120FN with 35mm film and test out the new .5x Wide Angle Adapter.


Thursday, October 7, 2010

New Arrivals: Holga .5x Wide Angle Adapter

Wow, a two-element plastic wide angle lens for my Holga 120FN. Now I can comfortably shoot 35mm film with the 35mm film adapter (mask and back), or as panoramic sprocket-hole with the modified 6x6cm mask.

It slides right over the existing lens covering the distance scale, which is OK, since it’s meant to focus at infinity anyway. It even comes with its own storage pouch, and front and rear caps.