APS film cameras

yinyangbt

MFL addicted
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Hello, again !
I'm just curious if there is somebody still using advantix APS film ? I find appealing the 16/9 original crop ,the cameras are cheap (even the film isn't) and I'd give a try ,just for fun .As for the cameras I'd have to choose between Canon IX , Nikon Pronea and Minolta Vectis .Any hints? 🙂
 
Expensive film, expensive development, inferior quality compared to 35mm film, not easy to scan with a normal scanner. I had such a thing 10 years ago and even the cameras where no fun to use compared to other PS cameras. Just my opinion.
 
Hi,

The cameras are dirt cheap, often pennies on ebay and in charity shops. The best are brilliant (look at the Contax Tix but don't curse me if if fails and can't be repaired). The Minolta SLR is an eye opener and the Kodak T550 is a neat design and a fine pocket camera. Konica does the Z3 - a great compact zoom and there's the Rollei Nano 80 as well. There's even a Leica C11 but I'd rather not say what I think of it!

Sample:
Photo-03-L.jpg


Film's cheap as some are unloading it and D&P costs no more than a 24 or 36 exposure 35mm camera film.

Regards, David
 
Back in 2004 I got a Canon ELPH Jr as a tiny pocket camera; fast 26mm f/2.8 non-zoom and just big enough to fit an APS film. It's been handy as an alternative camera while traveling.

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U77I1203499290.SEQ.0.jpg
 
Hi,

My Contax Tix taken with the wife's Tix (or, perhaps, the other way round.

Photo-22-XL.jpg


BTW, the picture of the green MG was taken with a Konica Revio Z3.

Regards, David
 
i bought a nikon pronea s some time ago. just because it was more or less for free and i liked the design somehow. i also bought one film for it, but haven't used it till now.
unfortunately the mirror sticks sometimes.

i especially like how to flash pops up. to bad that it uses such an ugly film format.
 
Very good samples , David , very encouraging . Konica and Contax seemed to do a good job here .Canon IX and IX 7 could also be a choice using best Canon fit lenses I can afford (the best lens available should be important because of the small frame .In Romania I doubt I'll find a lab still processing this ,so I'll have to do this myself (wich probably is doubtful ) or sending to a more distant location to process .Do you find a good lab processing this in your area or you have similar problems?
 
The Contax Tix is a gem of a little camera, beautifully built and a terrific performer. The Nikon Pronea 600i when married to top end Nikkor glass probably takes the all time best award.
 
Very good samples , David , very encouraging . Konica and Contax seemed to do a good job here .Canon IX and IX 7 could also be a choice using best Canon fit lenses I can afford (the best lens available should be important because of the small frame .In Romania I doubt I'll find a lab still processing this ,so I'll have to do this myself (wich probably is doubtful ) or sending to a more distant location to process .Do you find a good lab processing this in your area or you have similar problems?

Hi,

Thanks, I'm pleased with them both but wonder what will happen when they fail. I hope they fail after my APS film in cold storage runs out.

As for processing, there are four one hour labs within a short distance of me (in small market towns) and one of them is brilliant and gets all my work.

Once out of the cassette APS looks like any other film as, once, a label came off in the lab and they asked everyone if they could recognise the negatives. So you ought to be able to process them if you can adapt a tank to take them.

Regards, David
 
I had a few of them ... the Contax Tix was by far my favorite. I still have the excellent little Canon ELPH Jr and a Nikon Pronea S, and a ton of now hard to find film (Kodak B&W, Fuji F100, etc) stored in the freezer.

Difficult and expensive to process? Hmm. It costs the same to process a roll of 40 exposure APS negatives at the local drugstore (Walgreens) as it does to process a roll of 35mm negatives. Printing APS is a pain if you are working in a darkroom, but if you've got a Nikon Coolscan IV or V film scanner and the APS negative carrier, it's a doddle! Load a roll, tell Vuescan to preview all the frames, walk through them and set capture parameters for each frame individually, then say 'scan' and walk away. An hour later the scanner will be done and your image ready for you to work with in Lightroom or other image processing app of your choice. Much easier than working with rolls of 35mm.


Nikon Pronea S + IX-Nikkor 30-60mm
Kodak Advantix B&W

It's fun. I wish I had more time ... most of my photographic time nowadays is going into 6x6 film and Leica M9 digital work. If anyone's interested in the APS stuff I have, I'll be happy to offer it all at a very reasonable price. Just send me a note.
 
but they don't have any bokeh....

I think you miss the meaning of the word 'bokeh'. It means the 'quality of blur' not the amount of blur. If you've used a small lens opening at a reasonable distance to achieve a good bit of depth of field and image sharpness, you won't see much blur.

But I assure you that if I fit my Pronea S with the Nikkor-H 85mm f1.8 lens or Nikkor 50mm f/1.2, and set the lens opening to f/2, and make a portrait distance photo with it, you'll see not only a good bit of blur but also some lovely bokeh.
 
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