I do and I always did. Every film gets a number and is entered in my self-designed notebook.
This way every single frame is defined.
This sounds pedantic but in reality it simplifies life - when you find something in a photo and ask yourself "did I use a fliter?" or "why is this not really sharp?" or "this is slightly underexposed. What ec did I set?" and of course when you are experimenting for a specific effect: when you found it you probably want to know how to repeat it. Or someone asks for a print ... search the negative...
When in a hurry I do not fill in everything but at least date, camera and lens are recorded. When enough time is left all details can be recorded. Taking pictures always has priority.
When on a trip I simply take a single sheet of this as sketch and transfer it to the proper notebook when at home.
When traveling this notebook is also handy in case I want to write down additional information, e.g. what I had for lunch, the name of the nice young lady or the name of the village I just came through.
This is a sketch sheet from a three weeks vacation:
Well, I didn't at the time I made that image of my records; that was from my brief opportunity to use one at the Leica Roadshow event. But I did get one a few weeks ago.
Well, I didn't at the time I made that image of my records; that was from my brief opportunity to use one at the Leica Roadshow event. But I did get one a few weeks ago.
Most of the information is obvious from the subject and the image data is well stored in EXIF tags with digital. But even in digital I do mostly some speech comment in a actual mobile phone for scene and lens changes. For film I replicate that into an Excel sheet for each roll or shooting, adding a few more information.
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