Wednesday, June 10, 2015

On Film, Part 3: The Frames that made my bones

Can anyone out there in the film photography world recall the specific frames that made them fall in love with a particular film stock or film in general? Up until June 2013, I mostly stuck to B&W and only dabbled in color film. If I shot color, it was most likely FujiChrome but E6 was becoming harder and more expensive to have processed in my city, so I just kind of abandoned color all together.

Then a friend sent me a text from the DC Pride Parade telling me to get down there to grab some frames. I thought "Pride" "Parade" "Reveling" - COLOR. So I dug through the freezer and found two rolls of extremely expired Kodak Gold 200 and hit the streets. I arrived right at the onset of golden hour and ripped through the two 24 frame rolls in no time, completely oblivious to the rules and strategies of overexposing expired color negative film. But I didn't care, this was just a fun trip through the final few blocks of the parade:



The results from the lab were hit or miss, with the hits being a huge whiff (WAY underexposed) but the hits, well..these two frames featured above rang my head like a gong and woke me up to the incredible qualities of color negative. Especially expired cheapo films. My digital color work has never been the same and I'm almost always striving for that hyper contrasty, saturated look of well exposed KodakGold.

Does anyone else have frames of theirs in mind that simply made them reconsider everything that came before then? It's amazing how these things stick around in our minds. Below are a few more favorites from the two rolls I shot that afternoon, forever changing my approach to color.