The beauty of a rural Missouri small town is captured through the lens of a Pentax 645 medium format 120 camera and 45-85mm zoom lens. The film, Delta 400, adds a unique grain and character to the images, showcasing the power of classic photography techniques.
What do you think of Delta 400 and what is your favorite conditions to shoot it? Also, what are your thoughts on the Pentax 645 camera? Thanks for watching!
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I test my new-to-me Mamiya 645 1000s medium format film camera loaded with Kentmere 400 black and white 120 film shot at box speed. I also have the perfect lens for this location in the Mamiya 55-110mm f/4.5 zoom. It offers crisp, sharp images at any focal length and is perfect for walk-around photography.
Small midwestern towns lend themselves to plenty of photo opportunities, the towns in this video are no exception. Follow me as I shoot two rolls of Kentmere 400 pushed to 800 with my Pentax 645 medium format camera, developed in Cinestill DF96 developer. And is that a funeral hearse!?
Indiana Backroads Photography with the Pentax 645 medium format camera and Kentmere 400 film1/9/2025
Do you ever get out of your hometown for random photography in rural areas? Helps that I have a job that requires travel, but what about you? Do you get out as often as you'd like?
Follow me as I shoot two rolls of Kentmere 400 pushed to 800 with my Pentax 645 medium format camera, developed in Cinestill DF96 developer in some backroads and small towns in rural Indiana.
In this video, I find myself in some abandoned woods near Mineral Point, Wisconsin that was being used as an old auto dumping ground of some sort. I also stop by an out-of-business body shop near Carmi, Illinois that offered some excellent old vehicles and a rusted out school bus.
Pentax 645 film camera with the Pentax 45-85mm f/4.5 zoom, and a roll of Kentmere 400 pushed to 800, developed in Cinestill DF96 and scanned on an Epson V600, with minor modifications in Lightroom. |
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