Borrowed Wellington's Action Sampler and ran a roll of provia through it and x-processed it to give the wonky colours you see here. Heh, to be frank, I was a little dissapointed at the results, but considering the exposure is fixed(it doesn't vary no matter the light!), such a catch is pretty good heh. I realise now though how expensive lomography can be because every shot is a hit and miss, but it's great in that you never really know what you're gonna get, what shots are gonna succeed and what are not for purely technical reasons. Splendid! I had so much fun and excitement shooting the roll that I probably will get myself a lomo too, though I'm looking at a lomo Frogeye(underwater version) or Horizon perfekt(panoramic model). I apologise first of all to those whom I promised your photos would be here and they're not. It simply means your photo was either overexposed or underexposed. I kept everything that could be seen. Unfortunately for some, the lens wasn't as wide as I thought, which is why my face features in all too many pictures. It could even be a self-portrait series. Interestingly enough, none of my pictures with JC screwed up, even though I took the most with him. It's a miracle in itself haha! Honestly though, I unrealistically thought that I would get images of everyone, even though they were blurry, I forgot completely about the lack of any bells and whistles on this thing and the fact that auto exposure(or even manual exposure adjustment) didn't exist on the camera! Complete basic stuff, so ya, I apologise if your photo didn't quite come out. I was using slides as well so there isn't any room for exposure error. I might try using negs the next time and X-processing it using software, but that wouldn't quite be as fun would it? Though it would be 1/3rd the price. Heh. Anyhow, here it is. Might look like a collection of shit to some of you, but hey, I like it! Oh well, definitely not for serious work!
Click on the image to view, I couldn't get blogger to put up the full size here.
