How to Shoot Film Portraits at Home (feat. Fuji GW690ii + Yashica EM) by Sean Tucker
In this series of videos, Sean Tucker takes you through his process of shooting, developing and processing my film at home. In part 01 Sean introduces you to the cameras he uses, the black and white film stock he has landed on, and the constant lighting setup he uses for portraits, featuring the Aputure 120Dmkii.
In part 02, he shows you my process for developing the negatives at home using a changing bag, a Paterson Tank, and Ilford developers. In part 03, Sean shows you how he scans those images into high res files and convert them to positive 3 ways, including Lightroom Classic, Negative Lab Pro, and Photoshop.
Behind the Scenes:
Final Image:
Cameras used:
Minolta X700 with 50mm f2 lens
Canon EOS500 with 50mm f1.8 lens
Yashica EM
Fuji GW690ii
Film used:
Fomapan 100
Light:
Aputure LS C120D II
Modifier:
Lencarta 16 pole 80cm Folding Beauty Dish
App:
myLightMeter PRO
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Text, image and video via Sean Tucker | Photography Workshop
1 comments:
Thanks for posting. Nice video for portrait work with film cameras. I’m looking forward to the rest of the series.
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